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Dive into the research topics where G. Cacciatore is active.

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Featured researches published by G. Cacciatore.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2009

Anti-remodelling effect of canrenone in patients with mild chronic heart failure (AREA IN-CHF study): final results.

Alessandro Boccanelli; Gian Francesco Mureddu; G. Cacciatore; Francesco Clemenza; Andrea Di Lenarda; Antonello Gavazzi; Maurizio Porcu; Roberto Latini; Donata Lucci; Aldo P. Maggioni; Serge Masson; M. Vanasia; Giovanni de Simone

To test whether canrenone, an aldosterone receptor antagonist, improves left ventricular (LV) remodelling in NYHA class II heart failure (HF). Aldosterone receptor antagonists improve outcome in severe HF, but no information is available in NYHA class II.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2012

Acute heart failure patient profiles, management and in-hospital outcome: results of the Italian Registry on Heart Failure Outcome.

Fabrizio Oliva; Andrea Mortara; G. Cacciatore; Alessandra Chinaglia; Andrea Di Lenarda; Marco Gorini; Marco Metra; Michele Senni; Aldo P. Maggioni; Luigi Tavazzi

Registries and surveys improve knowledge of the ‘real world’. This paper aims to describe baseline clinical profiles, management strategies, and the in‐hospital outcome of patients admitted to hospital for an acute heart failure (AHF) episode.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2000

Comparison of one-year outcome in women versus men with chronic congestive heart failure

Cristina Opasich; Luigi Tavazzi; Donata Lucci; Marco Gorini; Maria Cecilia Albanese; G. Cacciatore; Aldo P. Maggioni

Using information from the Italian Network on Congestive Heart Failure, we examined whether clinical epidemiologic characteristics, drug prescription patterns, and outcome of patients with congestive heart failure differed according to sex and whether gender was an independent risk factor for mortality and hospital admissions.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2013

Multicenter Prospective Observational Study on Acute and Chronic Heart Failure One-Year Follow-up Results of IN-HF (Italian Network on Heart Failure) Outcome Registry

Luigi Tavazzi; Michele Senni; Marco Metra; Marco Gorini; G. Cacciatore; Alessandra Chinaglia; Andrea Di Lenarda; Andrea Mortara; Fabrizio Oliva; Aldo P. Maggioni

Background— Clinical observational studies on heart failure (HF) deal mostly with hospitalized patients, few with chronic outpatients, all with no or limited longitudinal observation. Methods and Results— This is a multicenter, nationwide, prospective observational trial on a population of 5610 patients, 1855 hospitalized for acute HF (AHF) and 3755 outpatients with chronic HF (CHF), followed up for 1 year. The cumulative total mortality rate at 1 year was 24% in AHF (19.2% in 797 patients with de novo HF and 27.7% in 1058 with worsening HF) and 5.9% in CHF. Cardiovascular deaths accounted for 73.1% and 65.3% and HF deaths for 42.4% and 40.5% of total deaths in AHF and CHF patients, respectively. One-year hospitalization rates were 30.7% in AHF and 22.7% in CHF patients. Among the independent predictors of 1-year all-cause death, age, low systolic blood pressure, anemia, and renal dysfunction were identified in both acute and chronic patients. A few additional variables were significant only in AHF (signs of cerebral hypoperfusion, low serum sodium, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and acute pulmonary edema), whereas others were observed only in CHF patients (lower body mass index, higher heart rate, New York Heart Association class, large QRS, and severe mitral regurgitation). Conclusions— In this contemporary data set, patients with CHF had a relatively low mortality rate compared with those with AHF. Rates of adverse outcomes in patients admitted for AHF remain very high either in-hospital or after discharge. Most deaths were cardiovascular in origin and ≈40% of deaths were directly related to HF.Background—Clinical observational studies on heart failure (HF) deal mostly with hospitalized patients, few with chronic outpatients, all with no or limited longitudinal observation. Methods and Results—This is a multicenter, nationwide, prospective observational trial on a population of 5610 patients, 1855 hospitalized for acute HF (AHF) and 3755 outpatients with chronic HF (CHF), followed up for 1 year. The cumulative total mortality rate at 1 year was 24% in AHF (19.2% in 797 patients with de novo HF and 27.7% in 1058 with worsening HF) and 5.9% in CHF. Cardiovascular deaths accounted for 73.1% and 65.3% and HF deaths for 42.4% and 40.5% of total deaths in AHF and CHF patients, respectively. One-year hospitalization rates were 30.7% in AHF and 22.7% in CHF patients. Among the independent predictors of 1-year all-cause death, age, low systolic blood pressure, anemia, and renal dysfunction were identified in both acute and chronic patients. A few additional variables were significant only in AHF (signs of cerebral hypoperfusion, low serum sodium, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and acute pulmonary edema), whereas others were observed only in CHF patients (lower body mass index, higher heart rate, New York Heart Association class, large QRS, and severe mitral regurgitation). Conclusions—In this contemporary data set, patients with CHF had a relatively low mortality rate compared with those with AHF. Rates of adverse outcomes in patients admitted for AHF remain very high either in-hospital or after discharge. Most deaths were cardiovascular in origin and ≈40% of deaths were directly related to HF.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2013

Multicenter Prospective Observational Study on Acute and Chronic Heart FailureClinical Perspective

Luigi Tavazzi; Michele Senni; Marco Metra; Marco Gorini; G. Cacciatore; Alessandra Chinaglia; Andrea Di Lenarda; Andrea Mortara; Fabrizio Oliva; Aldo P. Maggioni

Background— Clinical observational studies on heart failure (HF) deal mostly with hospitalized patients, few with chronic outpatients, all with no or limited longitudinal observation. Methods and Results— This is a multicenter, nationwide, prospective observational trial on a population of 5610 patients, 1855 hospitalized for acute HF (AHF) and 3755 outpatients with chronic HF (CHF), followed up for 1 year. The cumulative total mortality rate at 1 year was 24% in AHF (19.2% in 797 patients with de novo HF and 27.7% in 1058 with worsening HF) and 5.9% in CHF. Cardiovascular deaths accounted for 73.1% and 65.3% and HF deaths for 42.4% and 40.5% of total deaths in AHF and CHF patients, respectively. One-year hospitalization rates were 30.7% in AHF and 22.7% in CHF patients. Among the independent predictors of 1-year all-cause death, age, low systolic blood pressure, anemia, and renal dysfunction were identified in both acute and chronic patients. A few additional variables were significant only in AHF (signs of cerebral hypoperfusion, low serum sodium, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and acute pulmonary edema), whereas others were observed only in CHF patients (lower body mass index, higher heart rate, New York Heart Association class, large QRS, and severe mitral regurgitation). Conclusions— In this contemporary data set, patients with CHF had a relatively low mortality rate compared with those with AHF. Rates of adverse outcomes in patients admitted for AHF remain very high either in-hospital or after discharge. Most deaths were cardiovascular in origin and ≈40% of deaths were directly related to HF.Background—Clinical observational studies on heart failure (HF) deal mostly with hospitalized patients, few with chronic outpatients, all with no or limited longitudinal observation. Methods and Results—This is a multicenter, nationwide, prospective observational trial on a population of 5610 patients, 1855 hospitalized for acute HF (AHF) and 3755 outpatients with chronic HF (CHF), followed up for 1 year. The cumulative total mortality rate at 1 year was 24% in AHF (19.2% in 797 patients with de novo HF and 27.7% in 1058 with worsening HF) and 5.9% in CHF. Cardiovascular deaths accounted for 73.1% and 65.3% and HF deaths for 42.4% and 40.5% of total deaths in AHF and CHF patients, respectively. One-year hospitalization rates were 30.7% in AHF and 22.7% in CHF patients. Among the independent predictors of 1-year all-cause death, age, low systolic blood pressure, anemia, and renal dysfunction were identified in both acute and chronic patients. A few additional variables were significant only in AHF (signs of cerebral hypoperfusion, low serum sodium, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and acute pulmonary edema), whereas others were observed only in CHF patients (lower body mass index, higher heart rate, New York Heart Association class, large QRS, and severe mitral regurgitation). Conclusions—In this contemporary data set, patients with CHF had a relatively low mortality rate compared with those with AHF. Rates of adverse outcomes in patients admitted for AHF remain very high either in-hospital or after discharge. Most deaths were cardiovascular in origin and ≈40% of deaths were directly related to HF.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2012

Prevalence of preclinical and clinical heart failure in the elderly. A population‐based study in Central Italy

Gian Francesco Mureddu; Nera Agabiti; Vittoria Rizzello; Francesco Forastiere; Roberto Latini; Giulia Cesaroni; Serge Masson; G. Cacciatore; Furio Colivicchi; Massimo Uguccioni; Carlo A. Perucci; Alessandro Boccanelli

We conducted a population‐based cross‐sectional study to assess the prevalence of both preclinical and clinical heart failure (HF) in the elderly.


Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine | 2007

Baseline characteristics of patients recruited in the AREA IN-CHF study (Antiremodelling Effect of Aldosterone Receptors Blockade with Canrenone in Mild Chronic Heart Failure)

Alessandro Boccanelli; G. Cacciatore; Gian Francesco Mureddu; Giovanni de Simone; Francesco Clemenza; Renata De Maria; Andrea Di Lenarda; Antonello Gavazzi; Roberto Latini; Serge Masson; Maurizio Porcu; M. Vanasia; Lucio Gonzini; Aldo P. Maggioni

Objective Excess aldosterone activity contributes to the pathogenesis and progression of heart failure (HF). Aldosterone antagonists improve clinical outcome in patients with severe HF or left ventricular (LV) dysfunction after myocardial infarction, but knowledge of their impact in mild chronic HF is sparse. AREA IN-CHF was planned to investigate the effects of canrenone on progression of LV remodelling in mild HF. Methods AREA IN-CHF is a multicentre, randomised, double-blind, parallel group comparison of canrenone (up to 50 mg/day) versus placebo in mild stable HF. The primary endpoint is change in echocardiographic LV end-diastolic volume over 12 months. Patients had New York Heart Association class II HF, LV ejection fraction ≤45%, stable standard therapy, creatinine ≤2.5 mg/dl, potassium ≤5.0 mmol/l. Follow-up examinations were scheduled monthly for the first 3 months and every 3 months thereafter. Aldosterone was measured at baseline, brain natriuretic peptide and procollagen type III amino-terminal peptide (PIIINP) at baseline and at 6 months. Echocardiography was performed at baseline, at 6 and 12 months. Results Among 467 patients, median age 64 years (interquartile range (IQR) 56–70 years), 84% were men, 52% had ischaemic HF, 96% were receiving angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers, 79% β-blockers. Brain natriuretic peptide, aldosterone and PIIINP were 88 pg/ml (IQR 35–185 pg/ml), 118 pg/ml (IQR 75–177 pg/ml), and 5.38 μg/l (IQR 3.98–7.14 μg/l), respectively. LV end-diastolic volume was 79 ml/m2 (IQR 64–105 ml/m2) and LV ejection fraction was 40% (IQR 33–45%). Conclusions The role of aldosterone blockade in patients with mild HF remains to be established. AREA IN-CHF is addressing this issue in a large population on optimal medical therapy.


Nutrition Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases | 2011

Effect of canrenone on left ventricular mechanics in patients with mild systolic heart failure and metabolic syndrome: the AREA-in-CHF study.

G. de Simone; Marcello Chinali; Mureddu Gf; G. Cacciatore; Donata Lucci; Roberto Latini; Serge Masson; M. Vanasia; Aldo P. Maggioni; Alessandro Boccanelli

BACKGROUND AND AIM We analyzed the effect of the mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist canrenone on LV mechanics in patients with or without metabolic syndrome (MetS) and compensated (Class II NYHA) heart failure (HF) with reduced ejection fraction (EF≤45%) on optimal therapy (including ACE-i or ARB, and β-blockers). METHODS AND RESULTS From a randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled trial (AREA-in-CHF), patients with (73 on canrenone [Can] and 77 on placebo [Pla]), based on modified ATPIII definition (BMI≥30kg/m(2) instead of waist girth) or without MetS (146 by arm). In addition to traditional echocardiographic parameters, we also evaluated myocardial mechano-energetic efficiency (MME) based on a previously reported method. At baseline, Can and Pla did not differ in age, BMI, blood pressure (BP), metabolic profile, BNP, and PIIINP. Compared with MetS-Pla, and controlling for age, sex and diabetes, at the final control MetS-Can exhibited increased MME, preserved E/A ratio, and decreased atrial dimensions (0.04<p<0.0001). At baseline, degree of diastolic dysfunction was similar in MetS-Can and MetS-Pla but after 12 months, diastolic function improved in MetS-Can, compared to MetS-Pla (p<0.002): moderate-to-severe diastolic dysfunction decreased from 26% to 12% with canrenone whereas it was unchanged with placebo (both 26%). Can, but not Pla, reduced BNP in both patients with or without MetS (p<0.0001). CONCLUSIONS Treatment with canrenone given on the top of optimal therapy in patients with MetS and chronic, stabilized HF with reduced EF, protects deterioration of MME, improves diastolic dysfunction and maximizes the decrease in BNP.


Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine | 2010

Diuretic therapy in heart failure: Current controversies and new approaches for fluid removal

Filippo Brandimarte; Gian Francesco Mureddu; Alessandro Boccanelli; G. Cacciatore; C. Brandimarte; Francesco Fedele; Mihai Gheorghiade

Hospitalization for heart failure is a major health problem with high in-hospital and postdischarge mortality and morbidity. Non-potassium-sparing diuretics (NPSDs) still remain the cornerstone of therapy for fluid management in heart failure despite the lack of large randomized trials evaluating their safety and optimal dosing regimens in both the acute and chronic setting. Recent retrospective data suggest increased mortality and re-hospitalization rates in a wide spectrum of heart failure patients receiving NPSDs, particularly at high doses. Electrolyte abnormalities, hypotension, activation of neurohormones, and worsening renal function may all be responsible for the observed poor outcomes. Although NPSD will continue to be important agents to promptly resolve signs and symptoms of heart failure, alternative therapies such as vasopressine antagonists and adenosine blocking agents or techniques like veno-venous ultrafiltration have been developed in an effort to reduce NPSD exposure and minimize their side effects. Until other new agents become available, it is probably prudent to combine NPSD with aldosterone blocking agents that are known to improve outcomes.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2013

Multicenter Prospective Observational Study on Acute and Chronic Heart Failure: The One-Year Follow-Up Results of IN-HF Outcome Registry

Luigi Tavazzi; Michele Senni; Marco Metra; Marco Gorini; G. Cacciatore; Alessandra Chinaglia; Andrea Di Lenarda; Andrea Mortara; Fabrizio Oliva; Aldo P. Maggioni

Background— Clinical observational studies on heart failure (HF) deal mostly with hospitalized patients, few with chronic outpatients, all with no or limited longitudinal observation. Methods and Results— This is a multicenter, nationwide, prospective observational trial on a population of 5610 patients, 1855 hospitalized for acute HF (AHF) and 3755 outpatients with chronic HF (CHF), followed up for 1 year. The cumulative total mortality rate at 1 year was 24% in AHF (19.2% in 797 patients with de novo HF and 27.7% in 1058 with worsening HF) and 5.9% in CHF. Cardiovascular deaths accounted for 73.1% and 65.3% and HF deaths for 42.4% and 40.5% of total deaths in AHF and CHF patients, respectively. One-year hospitalization rates were 30.7% in AHF and 22.7% in CHF patients. Among the independent predictors of 1-year all-cause death, age, low systolic blood pressure, anemia, and renal dysfunction were identified in both acute and chronic patients. A few additional variables were significant only in AHF (signs of cerebral hypoperfusion, low serum sodium, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and acute pulmonary edema), whereas others were observed only in CHF patients (lower body mass index, higher heart rate, New York Heart Association class, large QRS, and severe mitral regurgitation). Conclusions— In this contemporary data set, patients with CHF had a relatively low mortality rate compared with those with AHF. Rates of adverse outcomes in patients admitted for AHF remain very high either in-hospital or after discharge. Most deaths were cardiovascular in origin and ≈40% of deaths were directly related to HF.Background—Clinical observational studies on heart failure (HF) deal mostly with hospitalized patients, few with chronic outpatients, all with no or limited longitudinal observation. Methods and Results—This is a multicenter, nationwide, prospective observational trial on a population of 5610 patients, 1855 hospitalized for acute HF (AHF) and 3755 outpatients with chronic HF (CHF), followed up for 1 year. The cumulative total mortality rate at 1 year was 24% in AHF (19.2% in 797 patients with de novo HF and 27.7% in 1058 with worsening HF) and 5.9% in CHF. Cardiovascular deaths accounted for 73.1% and 65.3% and HF deaths for 42.4% and 40.5% of total deaths in AHF and CHF patients, respectively. One-year hospitalization rates were 30.7% in AHF and 22.7% in CHF patients. Among the independent predictors of 1-year all-cause death, age, low systolic blood pressure, anemia, and renal dysfunction were identified in both acute and chronic patients. A few additional variables were significant only in AHF (signs of cerebral hypoperfusion, low serum sodium, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and acute pulmonary edema), whereas others were observed only in CHF patients (lower body mass index, higher heart rate, New York Heart Association class, large QRS, and severe mitral regurgitation). Conclusions—In this contemporary data set, patients with CHF had a relatively low mortality rate compared with those with AHF. Rates of adverse outcomes in patients admitted for AHF remain very high either in-hospital or after discharge. Most deaths were cardiovascular in origin and ≈40% of deaths were directly related to HF.

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Maurizio Porcu

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Mureddu Gf

University of Naples Federico II

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Serge Masson

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Roberto Latini

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Antonello Gavazzi

Azienda Ospedaliera San Giovanni Addolorata

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