31 min

Anticipated EMPEROR-Preserved Trial for HFpEF; Delta Variant is Gorilla Glue Physician's Weekly Podcast

    • Medicine

An interview with lead investigator on full results from EMPEROR-Preserved Trial, which affirm that empagliflozin lowers the risk of CVD for heart failure in patients with HFpEF.

Welcome to this episode of Physician’s Weekly Podcast. My name is Dr Rachel Giles, from Medicom Medical Publishers, in collaboration with Physician’s Weekly.  This week I am recording this episode in the Italian alps, while attending the European Association of Urology Guidelines Panel meeting for Renal cell carcinoma, but we have 2 great in-depth  interviews for you this week.
 
Later in this episode, Physician’s Weekly’s Editorial Director Chris Cole interviews Dr. J. Stacey Klutts, a medical microbiologist at Rush University, about his op-ed in the Tampa Bay Times comparing the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 to Gorilla Glue, which went viral. And yes, the pun was intended. Dr Klutts also tells us about exactly how the vaccine was developed and how the Delta variant is detected in patients. Did you know there are currently 13 subtypes of the Delta variant? 
But first, we speak with the presenter at the European Society of Cardiology Annual Congress HOTLINE plenary talk, prof. Stefan Anker at the Charité Hospital in Berlin, Germany, about the full results of the EMPEROR-Preserved trial, which affirm that empagliflozin lowers the risk of cardiovascular death/hospitalization for heart failure in patients with heart failure and preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), leading one expert to say this is “a big day for patients living with HFpEF, a big day for heart failure clinicians.”
The primary endpoint—a composite of CV death and hospitalization for heart failure—was reduced by a relative 21% in patients treated with the sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor emagliflozin.
Published simultaneously online in the New England Journal of Medicine, these results represent the first trial to show unequivocal benefit of any drug on major heart failure outcomes in patients with heart failure and a preserved ejection fraction. 

Anker SD, et al; EMPEROR-Preserved Trial Investigators. Empagliflozin in Heart Failure with a Preserved Ejection Fraction. N Engl J Med. 2021 Aug 27. 
 

Let us know what you thought of this week’s episode on Twitter: @physicianswkly
Want to share your medical expertise, research, or unique experience in medicine on the PW podcast? Email us at editorial@physweekly.com!
Thanks for listening!

An interview with lead investigator on full results from EMPEROR-Preserved Trial, which affirm that empagliflozin lowers the risk of CVD for heart failure in patients with HFpEF.

Welcome to this episode of Physician’s Weekly Podcast. My name is Dr Rachel Giles, from Medicom Medical Publishers, in collaboration with Physician’s Weekly.  This week I am recording this episode in the Italian alps, while attending the European Association of Urology Guidelines Panel meeting for Renal cell carcinoma, but we have 2 great in-depth  interviews for you this week.
 
Later in this episode, Physician’s Weekly’s Editorial Director Chris Cole interviews Dr. J. Stacey Klutts, a medical microbiologist at Rush University, about his op-ed in the Tampa Bay Times comparing the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 to Gorilla Glue, which went viral. And yes, the pun was intended. Dr Klutts also tells us about exactly how the vaccine was developed and how the Delta variant is detected in patients. Did you know there are currently 13 subtypes of the Delta variant? 
But first, we speak with the presenter at the European Society of Cardiology Annual Congress HOTLINE plenary talk, prof. Stefan Anker at the Charité Hospital in Berlin, Germany, about the full results of the EMPEROR-Preserved trial, which affirm that empagliflozin lowers the risk of cardiovascular death/hospitalization for heart failure in patients with heart failure and preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), leading one expert to say this is “a big day for patients living with HFpEF, a big day for heart failure clinicians.”
The primary endpoint—a composite of CV death and hospitalization for heart failure—was reduced by a relative 21% in patients treated with the sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor emagliflozin.
Published simultaneously online in the New England Journal of Medicine, these results represent the first trial to show unequivocal benefit of any drug on major heart failure outcomes in patients with heart failure and a preserved ejection fraction. 

Anker SD, et al; EMPEROR-Preserved Trial Investigators. Empagliflozin in Heart Failure with a Preserved Ejection Fraction. N Engl J Med. 2021 Aug 27. 
 

Let us know what you thought of this week’s episode on Twitter: @physicianswkly
Want to share your medical expertise, research, or unique experience in medicine on the PW podcast? Email us at editorial@physweekly.com!
Thanks for listening!

31 min