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Dive into the research topics where Beth A. Davison is active.

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Featured researches published by Beth A. Davison.


The Lancet | 2013

Serelaxin, recombinant human relaxin-2, for treatment of acute heart failure (RELAX-AHF): a randomised, placebo-controlled trial

John R. Teerlink; Gad Cotter; Beth A. Davison; G. Michael Felker; Gerasimos Filippatos; Barry H. Greenberg; Piotr Ponikowski; Elaine Unemori; Adriaan A. Voors; Kirkwood F. Adams; Maria Dorobantu; Liliana Grinfeld; Guillaume Jondeau; Alon Marmor; Josep Masip; Peter S. Pang; Karl Werdan; Angelo J. Trapani; Christopher Bush; Rajnish Saini; Christoph Schumacher; Thomas Severin; Marco Metra

BACKGROUND Serelaxin, recombinant human relaxin-2, is a vasoactive peptide hormone with many biological and haemodynamic effects. In a pilot study, serelaxin was safe and well tolerated with positive clinical outcome signals in patients with acute heart failure. The RELAX-AHF trial tested the hypothesis that serelaxin-treated patients would have greater dyspnoea relief compared with patients treated with standard care and placebo. METHODS RELAX-AHF was an international, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, enrolling patients admitted to hospital for acute heart failure who were randomly assigned (1:1) via a central randomisation scheme blocked by study centre to standard care plus 48-h intravenous infusions of placebo or serelaxin (30 μg/kg per day) within 16 h from presentation. All patients had dyspnoea, congestion on chest radiograph, increased brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) or N-terminal prohormone of BNP, mild-to-moderate renal insufficiency, and systolic blood pressure greater than 125 mm Hg. Patients, personnel administering study drug, and those undertaking study-related assessments were masked to treatment assignment. The primary endpoints evaluating dyspnoea improvement were change from baseline in the visual analogue scale area under the curve (VAS AUC) to day 5 and the proportion of patients with moderate or marked dyspnoea improvement measured by Likert scale during the first 24 h, both analysed by intention to treat. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00520806. FINDINGS 1161 patients were randomly assigned to serelaxin (n=581) or placebo (n=580). Serelaxin improved the VAS AUC primary dyspnoea endpoint (448 mm × h, 95% CI 120-775; p=0·007) compared with placebo, but had no significant effect on the other primary endpoint (Likert scale; placebo, 150 patients [26%]; serelaxin, 156 [27%]; p=0·70). No significant effects were recorded for the secondary endpoints of cardiovascular death or readmission to hospital for heart failure or renal failure (placebo, 75 events [60-day Kaplan-Meier estimate, 13·0%]; serelaxin, 76 events [13·2%]; hazard ratio [HR] 1·02 [0·74-1·41], p=0·89] or days alive out of the hospital up to day 60 (placebo, 47·7 [SD 12·1] days; serelaxin, 48·3 [11·6]; p=0·37). Serelaxin treatment was associated with significant reductions of other prespecified additional endpoints, including fewer deaths at day 180 (placebo, 65 deaths; serelaxin, 42; HR 0·63, 95% CI 0·42-0·93; p=0·019). INTERPRETATION Treatment of acute heart failure with serelaxin was associated with dyspnoea relief and improvement in other clinical outcomes, but had no effect on readmission to hospital. Serelaxin treatment was well tolerated and safe, supported by the reduced 180-day mortality. FUNDING Corthera, a Novartis affiliate company.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013

Effect of Serelaxin on Cardiac, Renal, and Hepatic Biomarkers in the Relaxin in Acute Heart Failure (RELAX-AHF) Development Program Correlation With Outcomes

Marco Metra; Gad Cotter; Beth A. Davison; G. Michael Felker; Gerasimos Filippatos; Barry H. Greenberg; Piotr Ponikowski; Elaine Unemori; Adriaan A. Voors; Kirkwood F. Adams; Maria Dorobantu; Liliana Grinfeld; Guillaume Jondeau; Alon Marmor; Josep Masip; Peter S. Pang; Karl Werdan; Margaret F. Prescott; Christopher Edwards; Angelo J. Trapani; Christopher Bush; Rajnish Saini; Christoph Schumacher; Thomas Severin; John R. Teerlink

OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to assess the effects of serelaxin on short-term changes in markers of organ damage and congestion and relate them to 180-day mortality in patients with acute heart failure. BACKGROUND Hospitalization for acute heart failure is associated with high post-discharge mortality, and this may be related to organ damage. METHODS The Pre-RELAX-AHF (Relaxin in Acute Heart Failure) phase II study and RELAX-AHF phase III study were international, multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials in which patients hospitalized for acute heart failure were randomized within 16 h to intravenous placebo or serelaxin. Each patient was followed daily to day 5 or discharge and at days 5, 14, and 60 after enrollment. Vital status was assessed through 180 days. In RELAX-AHF, laboratory evaluations were performed daily to day 5 and at day 14. Plasma levels of biomarkers were measured at baseline and days 2, 5, and 14. All-cause mortality was assessed as a safety endpoint in both studies. RESULTS Serelaxin reduced 180-day mortality, with similar effects in the phase II and phase III studies (combined studies: N = 1,395; hazard ratio: 0.62; 95% confidence interval: 0.43 to 0.88; p = 0.0076). In RELAX-AHF, changes in markers of cardiac (high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T), renal (creatinine and cystatin-C), and hepatic (aspartate transaminase and alanine transaminase) damage and of decongestion (N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide) at day 2 and worsening heart failure during admission were associated with 180-day mortality. Serelaxin administration improved these markers, consistent with the prevention of organ damage and faster decongestion. CONCLUSIONS Early administration of serelaxin was associated with a reduction of 180-day mortality, and this occurred with fewer signs of organ damage and more rapid relief of congestion during the first days after admission.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2012

Is Worsening Renal Function an Ominous Prognostic Sign in Patients with Acute Heart Failure? The Role of Congestion and Its Interaction with Renal Function

Marco Metra; Beth A. Davison; Luca Bettari; Hengrui Sun; Christopher R. W. Edwards; Valentina Lazzarini; Barbara Piovanelli; Valentina Carubelli; Silvia Bugatti; Carlo Lombardi; Gad Cotter; Livio Dei Cas

Background— Worsening renal function (WRF), traditionally defined as an increase in serum creatinine levels ≥0.3 mg/dL, is a frequent finding in patients with acute heart failure (AHF) and has been associated with poorer outcomes in some but not all studies. We hypothesized that these discrepancies may be caused by the interaction between WRF and congestion in AHF patients. Methods and Results— We measured serum creatinine levels on a daily basis during the hospitalization and assessed the persistence of signs of congestion at discharge in 599 consecutive patients admitted at our institute for AHF. They had a postdischarge mortality and mortality or AHF readmission rates of 13% and 43%, respectively, after 1 year. Patients were subdivided into 4 groups according to the development or not of WRF and the persistence of ≥1 sign of congestion at discharge. Patients with WRF and no congestion had similar outcomes compared with those with no WRF and no congestion, whereas the risk of death or of death or AHF readmission was increased in the patients with persistent congestion alone and in those with both WRF and congestion (hazard ratio, 5.35; 95% confidence interval, 3.0–9.55 at univariable analysis; hazard ratio, 2.44; 95% confidence interval, 1.24–4.18 at multivariable analysis for mortality; hazard ratio, 2.14; 95% confidence interval, 1.39–3.3 at univariable analysis; and hazard ratio, 1.39; 95% confidence interval, 0.88–2.2 at multivariable analysis for mortality and rehospitalizations). Conclusions— WRF alone, when detected using serial serum creatinine measurements, is not an independent determinant of outcomes in patients with AHF. It has an additive prognostic value when it occurs in patients with persistent signs of congestion.Background— Worsening renal function (WRF), traditionally defined as an increase in serum creatinine levels ≥0.3 mg/dL, is a frequent finding in patients with acute heart failure (AHF) and has been associated with poorer outcomes in some but not all studies. We hypothesized that these discrepancies may be caused by the interaction between WRF and congestion in AHF patients. Methods and Results— We measured serum creatinine levels on a daily basis during the hospitalization and assessed the persistence of signs of congestion at discharge in 599 consecutive patients admitted at our institute for AHF. They had a postdischarge mortality and mortality or AHF readmission rates of 13% and 43%, respectively, after 1 year. Patients were subdivided into 4 groups according to the development or not of WRF and the persistence of ≥1 sign of congestion at discharge. Patients with WRF and no congestion had similar outcomes compared with those with no WRF and no congestion, whereas the risk of death or of death or AHF readmission was increased in the patients with persistent congestion alone and in those with both WRF and congestion (hazard ratio, 5.35; 95% confidence interval, 3.0–9.55 at univariable analysis; hazard ratio, 2.44; 95% confidence interval, 1.24–4.18 at multivariable analysis for mortality; hazard ratio, 2.14; 95% confidence interval, 1.39–3.3 at univariable analysis; and hazard ratio, 1.39; 95% confidence interval, 0.88–2.2 at multivariable analysis for mortality and rehospitalizations). Conclusions— WRF alone, when detected using serial serum creatinine measurements, is not an independent determinant of outcomes in patients with AHF. It has an additive prognostic value when it occurs in patients with persistent signs of congestion.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2012

Is Worsening Renal Function an Ominous Prognostic Sign in Patients With Acute Heart Failure?Clinical Perspective

Marco Metra; Beth A. Davison; Luca Bettari; Hengrui Sun; Christopher R. W. Edwards; Valentina Lazzarini; Barbara Piovanelli; Valentina Carubelli; Silvia Bugatti; Carlo Lombardi; Gad Cotter; Livio Dei Cas

Background— Worsening renal function (WRF), traditionally defined as an increase in serum creatinine levels ≥0.3 mg/dL, is a frequent finding in patients with acute heart failure (AHF) and has been associated with poorer outcomes in some but not all studies. We hypothesized that these discrepancies may be caused by the interaction between WRF and congestion in AHF patients. Methods and Results— We measured serum creatinine levels on a daily basis during the hospitalization and assessed the persistence of signs of congestion at discharge in 599 consecutive patients admitted at our institute for AHF. They had a postdischarge mortality and mortality or AHF readmission rates of 13% and 43%, respectively, after 1 year. Patients were subdivided into 4 groups according to the development or not of WRF and the persistence of ≥1 sign of congestion at discharge. Patients with WRF and no congestion had similar outcomes compared with those with no WRF and no congestion, whereas the risk of death or of death or AHF readmission was increased in the patients with persistent congestion alone and in those with both WRF and congestion (hazard ratio, 5.35; 95% confidence interval, 3.0–9.55 at univariable analysis; hazard ratio, 2.44; 95% confidence interval, 1.24–4.18 at multivariable analysis for mortality; hazard ratio, 2.14; 95% confidence interval, 1.39–3.3 at univariable analysis; and hazard ratio, 1.39; 95% confidence interval, 0.88–2.2 at multivariable analysis for mortality and rehospitalizations). Conclusions— WRF alone, when detected using serial serum creatinine measurements, is not an independent determinant of outcomes in patients with AHF. It has an additive prognostic value when it occurs in patients with persistent signs of congestion.Background— Worsening renal function (WRF), traditionally defined as an increase in serum creatinine levels ≥0.3 mg/dL, is a frequent finding in patients with acute heart failure (AHF) and has been associated with poorer outcomes in some but not all studies. We hypothesized that these discrepancies may be caused by the interaction between WRF and congestion in AHF patients. Methods and Results— We measured serum creatinine levels on a daily basis during the hospitalization and assessed the persistence of signs of congestion at discharge in 599 consecutive patients admitted at our institute for AHF. They had a postdischarge mortality and mortality or AHF readmission rates of 13% and 43%, respectively, after 1 year. Patients were subdivided into 4 groups according to the development or not of WRF and the persistence of ≥1 sign of congestion at discharge. Patients with WRF and no congestion had similar outcomes compared with those with no WRF and no congestion, whereas the risk of death or of death or AHF readmission was increased in the patients with persistent congestion alone and in those with both WRF and congestion (hazard ratio, 5.35; 95% confidence interval, 3.0–9.55 at univariable analysis; hazard ratio, 2.44; 95% confidence interval, 1.24–4.18 at multivariable analysis for mortality; hazard ratio, 2.14; 95% confidence interval, 1.39–3.3 at univariable analysis; and hazard ratio, 1.39; 95% confidence interval, 0.88–2.2 at multivariable analysis for mortality and rehospitalizations). Conclusions— WRF alone, when detected using serial serum creatinine measurements, is not an independent determinant of outcomes in patients with AHF. It has an additive prognostic value when it occurs in patients with persistent signs of congestion.


European Heart Journal | 2013

Diuretic response in acute heart failure : clinical characteristics and prognostic significance

Mattia A.E. Valente; Adriaan A. Voors; Kevin Damman; Dirk J. van Veldhuisen; B. Massie; Christopher M. O'Connor; Marco Metra; Piotr Ponikowski; John R. Teerlink; Gad Cotter; Beth A. Davison; John G.F. Cleland; Michael M. Givertz; Daniel M. Bloomfield; Mona Fiuzat; Howard C. Dittrich; Hans L. Hillege

AIM Diminished diuretic response is common in patients with acute heart failure, although a clinically useful definition is lacking. Our aim was to investigate a practical, workable metric for diuretic response, examine associated patient characteristics and relationships with outcome. METHODS AND RESULTS We examined diuretic response (defined as Δ weight kg/40 mg furosemide) in 1745 hospitalized acute heart failure patients from the PROTECT trial. Day 4 response was used to allow maximum differentiation in responsiveness and tailoring of diuretic doses to clinical response, following sensitivity analyses. We investigated predictors of diuretic response and relationships with outcome. The median diuretic response was -0.38 (-0.80 to -0.13) kg/40 mg furosemide. Poor diuretic response was independently associated with low systolic blood pressure, high blood urea nitrogen, diabetes, and atherosclerotic disease (all P < 0.05). Worse diuretic response independently predicted 180-day mortality (HR: 1.42; 95% CI: 1.11-1.81, P = 0.005), 60-day death or renal or cardiovascular rehospitalization (HR: 1.34; 95% CI: 1.14-1.59, P < 0.001) and 60-day HF rehospitalization (HR: 1.57; 95% CI: 1.24-2.01, P < 0.001) in multivariable models. The proposed metric-weight loss indexed to diuretic dose-better captures a dose-response relationship. Model diagnostics showed diuretic response provided essentially the same or slightly better prognostic information compared with its individual components (weight loss and diuretic dose) in this population, while providing a less biased, more easily interpreted signal. CONCLUSIONS Worse diuretic response was associated with more advanced heart failure, renal impairment, diabetes, atherosclerotic disease and in-hospital worsening heart failure, and predicts mortality and heart failure rehospitalization in this post hoc, hypothesis-generating study.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013

The Predictive Value of Short-Term Changes in Hemoglobin Concentration in Patients Presenting With Acute Decompensated Heart Failure

Peter van der Meer; Douwe Postmus; Piotr Ponikowski; John G.F. Cleland; Christopher M. O'Connor; Gad Cotter; Marco Metra; Beth A. Davison; Michael M. Givertz; George A. Mansoor; John R. Teerlink; Barry M. Massie; Hans L. Hillege; Adriaan A. Voors

OBJECTIVES The study sought to investigate the clinical correlates and prognostic role of anemia and changes in hemoglobin in patients hospitalized for acute decompensated heart failure (AHF). BACKGROUND Anemia is related to a poor outcome in patients with heart failure. In addition, an increase in hemoglobin during hospitalization might be a sign of effective decongestion and therefore related to improved outcome. METHODS This is a post hoc analysis of the PROTECT (Placebo-Controlled Randomized Study of the Selective Adenosine A1 Receptor Antagonist Rolofylline for Patients Hospitalized with Acute Decompensated Heart Failure and Volume Overload to Assess Treatment Effect on Congestion and Renal Function) study in 1,969 patients with AHF and mild to moderate impaired renal function. Hemoglobin levels were measured daily for the first 4 days and at day 7. The endpoint was 180-day all-cause mortality. RESULTS Anemia at baseline was observed in 50.3% of the patients. During follow-up, 359 patients (18.2%) died. Hemoglobin increased in 69.1% and was associated with a better renal function at baseline and more weight loss, but was associated with a deterioration of renal function (p = 0.01), whereas total dose diuretics was lower in patients with hemoconcentration (p < 0.01). Interaction analysis showed that greater weight loss and better baseline renal function were associated with a more rapid increase in hemoglobin concentration (p < 0.01 for both). The absolute change in hemoglobin (g/dl) independently predicted outcome (hazard ratio: 0.66; 95% confidence interval: 0.51 to 0.86; p = 0.002), whereas baseline hemoglobin levels did not. CONCLUSIONS Patients with AHF and preserved renal function are decongested better, as shown by an increase in hemoglobin. A rapid increase in hemoglobin during the first week is independently associated with a favorable outcome, despite a slight decrease in renal function.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2012

The PROTECT in-hospital risk model: 7-day outcome in patients hospitalized with acute heart failure and renal dysfunction

Christopher M. O'Connor; Robert J. Mentz; Gad Cotter; Marco Metra; John G.F. Cleland; Beth A. Davison; Michael M. Givertz; George A. Mansoor; Piotr Ponikowski; John R. Teerlink; Adriaan A. Voors; Mona Fiuzat; Daniel Wojdyla; Karen Chiswell; Barry M. Massie

In patients with acute heart failure (AHF), early worsening heart failure (WHF) predicts a significant proportion of post‐discharge readmissions and mortality. We aimed to identify the predictors of 7‐day heart failure events or death in patients hospitalized with AHF.


European Heart Journal | 2014

Serelaxin in acute heart failure patients with preserved left ventricular ejection fraction: results from the RELAX-AHF trial

Gerasimos Filippatos; John R. Teerlink; Dimitrios Farmakis; Gad Cotter; Beth A. Davison; G. Michael Felker; Barry H. Greenberg; Tsushung Hua; Piotr Ponikowski; Thomas Severin; Elaine Unemori; Adriaan A. Voors; Marco Metra

Aims Serelaxin is effective in relieving dyspnoea and improving multiple outcomes in acute heart failure (AHF). Many AHF patients have preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Given the lack of evidence-based therapies in this population, we evaluated the effects of serelaxin according to EF in RELAX-AHF trial. Methods and results RELAX-AHF randomized 1161 AHF patients to 48-h serelaxin (30 μg/kg/day) or placebo within 16 h from presentation. We compared the effects of serelaxin on efficacy endpoints, safety endpoints, and biomarkers of organ damage between preserved (≥50%) and reduced (<50%, HFrEF) EF. HFpEF was present in 26% of patients. Serelaxin induced a similar dyspnoea relief in HFpEF vs. HFrEF patients by visual analogue scale-area under the curve (VAS-AUC) through Day 5 [mean change, 461 (−195, 1117) vs. 397 (10, 783) mm h, P = 0.87], but had possibly different effects on the proportion of patients with moderately or markedly dyspnoea improvement by Likert scale at 6, 12, and 24 h [odds ratio for favourable response, 1.70 (0.98, 2.95) vs. 0.85 (0.62, 1.15), interaction P = 0.030]. No differences were encountered in the effect of serelaxin on short- or long-term outcome between HFpEF and HFrEF patients including cardiovascular death or hospitalization for heart/renal failure through Day 60, cardiovascular death through Day 180, and all-cause death through Day 180. Similar safety and changes in biomarkers (high-sensitivity troponin T, cystatin-C, and alanine/aspartate aminotransferases) were found in both groups. Conclusions In AHF patients with HFpEF compared with those with HFrEF, serelaxin was well tolerated and effective in relieving dyspnoea and had a similar effect on short- and long-term outcome, including survival improvement.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2011

Early drop in systolic blood pressure and worsening renal function in acute heart failure: renal results of Pre-RELAX-AHF.

Adriaan A. Voors; Beth A. Davison; G. Michael Felker; Piotr Ponikowski; Elaine Unemori; G. Cotter; John R. Teerlink; Barry H. Greenberg; Gerasimos Filippatos; Marco Metra

We aimed to determine the relation between baseline systolic blood pressure (SBP), change in SBP, and worsening renal function (WRF) in acute heart failure (AHF) patients enrolled in the Pre‐RELAX‐AHF trial.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2014

Predictors of Postdischarge Outcomes From Information Acquired Shortly After Admission for Acute Heart Failure A Report From the Placebo-Controlled Randomized Study of the Selective A1 Adenosine Receptor Antagonist Rolofylline for Patients Hospitalized With Acute Decompensated Heart Failure and Volume Overload to Assess Treatment Effect on Congestion and Renal Function (PROTECT) Study

John G.F. Cleland; Karen Chiswell; John R. Teerlink; Susanna R. Stevens; Mona Fiuzat; Michael M. Givertz; Beth A. Davison; George A. Mansoor; Piotr Ponikowski; Adriaan A. Voors; Gad Cotter; Marco Metra; Barry M. Massie; Christopher M. O'Connor

Background —Acute heart failure (AHF) is a common reason for admission and outcome is often poor. Improved prognostic risk stratification may assist in the design of future trials and in patient management. Using data from a large randomized trial, we explored the prognostic value of clinical variables, measured at hospital admission for AHF, to determine whether a few selected variables were inferior to an extended data-set. Methods and Results —The prognostic model included 37 clinical characteristics collected at baseline in PROTECT, a study comparing rolofylline and placebo in 2,033 patients admitted with AHF. Pre-specified outcomes at 30 days were death or re-hospitalization for any reason, death or re-hospitalization for cardiovascular or renal reasons and, at both 30 and 180 days, all-cause mortality. No variable had a c-index >0.70 and few had values >0.60; c-indices were lower for composite outcomes than for mortality. Blood urea was generally the strongest single predictor. Eighteen variables contributed independent prognostic information but a reduced model using only eight items (age, prior heart failure hospitalization, peripheral edema, systolic blood pressure, serum sodium, urea, creatinine and albumin) performed similarly. For all-cause mortality at 180-days, the model C-index using all variables was 0.72 and for the simplified model, also 0.72. Conclusions —A few simple clinical variables measured on admission in patients with AHF predict a variety of adverse outcomes with similar accuracy to more complex models. However, predictive models were of only moderate accuracy, especially for outcomes that included non-fatal events. Better methods of risk-stratification are required. Clinical Trial Registration —URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifiers: [NCT00328692][1] and [NCT00354458][2]. [1]: /lookup/external-ref?link_type=CLINTRIALGOV&access_num=NCT00328692&atom=%2Fcirchf%2Fearly%2F2013%2F11%2F26%2FCIRCHEARTFAILURE.113.000284.atom [2]: /lookup/external-ref?link_type=CLINTRIALGOV&access_num=NCT00354458&atom=%2Fcirchf%2Fearly%2F2013%2F11%2F26%2FCIRCHEARTFAILURE.113.000284.atom

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John R. Teerlink

San Francisco VA Medical Center

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Piotr Ponikowski

Wrocław Medical University

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Adriaan A. Voors

University Medical Center Groningen

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John G.F. Cleland

National Institutes of Health

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Michael M. Givertz

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Howard C. Dittrich

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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