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Featured researches published by Soccorso Capomolla.


Circulation | 2003

Short-Term Heart Rate Variability Strongly Predicts Sudden Cardiac Death in Chronic Heart Failure Patients

Maria Teresa La Rovere; Gian Domenico Pinna; Roberto Maestri; Andrea Mortara; Soccorso Capomolla; Oreste Febo; Roberto Ferrari; Mariella Franchini; Marco Gnemmi; Cristina Opasich; Pier Giorgio Riccardi; Egidio Traversi; Franco Cobelli

Background—The predictive value of heart rate variability (HRV) in chronic heart failure (CHF) has never been tested in a comprehensive multivariate model using short-term laboratory recordings designed to avoid the confounding effects of respiration and behavioral factors. Methods and Results—A multivariate survival model for the identification of sudden (presumably arrhythmic) death was developed with data from 202 consecutive patients referred between 1991 and 1995 with moderate to severe CHF (age 52±9 years, left ventricular ejection fraction 24±7%, New York Heart Association class 2.3±0.7; the derivation sample). Time- and frequency-domain HRV parameters obtained from an 8′ recording of ECG at baseline and during controlled breathing (12 to 15 breaths/min) were challenged against clinical and functional parameters. This model was then validated in 242 consecutive patients referred between 1996 and 2001 (validation sample). In the derivation sample, sudden death was independently predicted by a model that included low-frequency power (LFP) of HRV during controlled breathing ≤13 ms2 and left ventricular end-diastolic diameter ≥77 mm (relative risk [RR] 3.7, 95% CI 1.5 to 9.3, and RR 2.6, 95% CI 1.0 to 6.3, respectively). The derivation model was also a significant predictor in the validation sample (P =0.04). In the validation sample, LFP ≤11 ms2 during controlled breathing and ≥83 ventricular premature contractions per hour on Holter monitoring were both independent predictors of sudden death (RR 3.0, 95% CI 1.2 to 7.6, and RR 3.7, 95% CI 1.5 to 9.0, respectively). Conclusions—Reduced short-term LFP during controlled breathing is a powerful predictor of sudden death in patients with CHF that is independent of many other variables. These results refine the identification of patients who may benefit from prophylactic implantation of a cardiac defibrillator.


American Heart Journal | 2000

β-Blockade therapy in chronic heart failure: Diastolic function and mitral regurgitation improvement by carvedilol

Soccorso Capomolla; Oreste Febo; Marco Gnemmi; G. Riccardi; Cristina Opasich; Angelo Caporotondi; Andrea Mortara; GianDomenico Pinna; Franco Cobelli

BACKGROUND: In patients with chronic heart failure, the use of carvedilol therapy induces clinical and hemodynamic improvement. However, although the benefits of this beta-blocker have been established in patients with chronic heart failure, the mechanisms underlying them and the changes in left ventricular systolic function, diastolic function, and mitral regurgitation during long-term therapy remain unclear. OBJECTIVE: To identify the clinical and functional effects of carvedilol, focusing on diastolic function and mitral regurgitation variations. METHODS: Forty-five consecutive patients with chronic heart failure (ejection fraction 24% +/- 7%), 17 with dilated ischemic and 28 with nonischemic cardiomyopathy, were treated with carvedilol (mean dose 44 +/- 30 mg) and matched for clinical (New York Heart Association functional class and heart failure duration) and hemodynamic (cardiac index and pulmonary wedge pressure) characteristics to a control group. Clinical and echocardiographic variables were measured in the 2 groups at baseline and after 6 months and the results compared. RESULTS: After 6 months of treatment with carvedilol, left ventricular ejection fraction had increased from 24% +/- 7% to 29% +/- 9% (P <.0001); this change was caused by a reduction in end-systolic volume index (106 +/- 41 vs 93 +/- 37 mL/m(2); P <. 0001). Deceleration time of early diastolic filling increased (134 +/- 74 vs 196 +/- 63 ms; P <.0001). Seventeen of the 27 patients with demonstrated improvement of left ventricular diastolic filling moved from having a restrictive filling pattern to having a normal or pseudonormal left ventricular filling pattern. In the control group, no significant changes in deceleration time of early diastolic filling were found (139 +/- 74 vs 132 +/- 45 ms; P = not significant). The effective regurgitant orifice area decreased significantly in the carvedilol group but not in the control group. These changes were associated with a significant reduction of the mitral regurgitant stroke volume in the carvedilol group (50 +/- 25 vs 16 +/- 13 mL; P <.0001) but not in the control group (57 +/- 29 vs 47 +/- 24 mL; P = not significant). These changes of mitral regurgitation were closely associated with significant improvement of forward aortic stroke volume (r = -.57, P <.0001). These findings were not observed in patients in the control group. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study show that long-term carvedilol therapy in patients with chronic heart failure was able to prevent or partially reverse progressive left ventricular dilatation. The effects on left ventricular remodeling were associated with a concomitant recovery of diastolic reserve and a decrease of mitral regurgitation, which have been demonstrated to be powerful prognostic predictors in such patients. Overall these findings provide important insights into the pathophysiologic mechanisms by which carvedilol improves the clinical course of patients with chronic heart failure.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2002

Cost/utility ratio in chronic heart failure: comparison between heart failure management program delivered by day-hospital and usual care

Soccorso Capomolla; Oreste Febo; Monica Ceresa; Angelo Caporotondi; Giampaolo Guazzotti; Maria Teresa La Rovere; Marina Ferrari; Francesca Lenta; Sonia Baldin; Chiara Vaccarini; Marco Gnemmi; GianDomenico Pinna; Roberto Maestri; Paola Abelli; Sandro Verdirosi; Franco Cobelli

OBJECTIVES This study compared the effectiveness and cost/utility ratio between a heart failure (HF) management program delivered by day-hospital (DH) and usual care in chronic heart failure (CHF) outpatients. BACKGROUND Previous studies showed that about 50% of readmissions for CHF can be prevented by a multidisciplinary approach However, the performance, effectiveness, and cost/utility ratio of a process of HF outpatient management related to evidence-based medicine have not been considered. METHODS A total of 234 prospective patients discharged by a HF Unit were randomized to two management strategies: 122 patients to usual community care and 112 patients to a HF management program delivered by the DH. Management (rate of readmissions, therapeutic interventions), functional parameters (New York Heart Association [NYHA] functional class, left ventricular diameters, and ejection fraction, deceleration time of early diastolic mitral flow, peak oxygen uptake, and mitral regurgitation) and hard outcomes (cardiac death and urgent cardiac transplantation) were evaluated. The cost/utility ratios of the two strategies were compared. RESULTS After 12 3 months of follow-up, the individual rate access in DH was 5.5 3.8 days. The DH subjects were readmitted to the hospital less frequently than were the usual-care group patients (13 vs. 78, p 0.00001). Patients allocated to usual-care management showed heterogeneous changes in NYHA functional class (13% improved and 16% worsened p NS); In contrast, the DH group showed significant changes in NYHA functional class (23% improved and 11% worsened, p 0.009). Hard cardiac events in the one-year follow-up occurred in 25/234 (10.6%) patients; cardiac death occurred in 21/122 (17.2%) of the community group and in 3/112 (2.7%) in the DH group (p 0.0007). One DH patient underwent urgent transplantation. Comparison of the two managerial models by Cox regression analysis showed that DH management significantly protected against the appearance of hard events (relative risk [RR] 0.17; confidence interval [CI] 0.06 to 0.66). The cost/utility ratio of the two management strategies was similar (usual care


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1998

Peak Exercise Oxygen Consumption in Chronic Heart Failure: Toward Efficient Use in the Individual Patient

C. Opasich; Gian Domenico Pinna; Marco Bobbio; Massimo Sisti; Brunella Demichelis; O. Febo; Giovanni Forni; Roberto Riccardi; P.Giorgio Riccardi; Soccorso Capomolla; Franco Cobelli; Luigi Tavazzi

2,409 vs. DH


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1996

Doppler echocardiography reliably predicts pulmonary artery wedge pressure in patients with chronic heart failure with and without mitral regurgitation

Massimo Pozzoli; Soccorso Capomolla; G.D. Pinna; Franco Cobelli; Luigi Tavazzi

2,244). The incremental analysis revealed a cost savings of


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2000

Nonselective beta-adrenergic blocking agent, carvedilol, improves arterial baroflex gain and heart rate variability in patients with stable chronic heart failure

Andrea Mortara; Maria Teresa La Rovere; Gian Domenico Pinna; Roberto Maestri; Soccorso Capomolla; Franco Cobelli

1,068 for each quality-adjusted life year gained. The cost/utility ratio for the integration of DH management of CHF was


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2009

Home telemonitoring in heart failure patients: the HHH study (Home or Hospital in Heart Failure).

Andrea Mortara; Gian Domenico Pinna; Paul Johnson; Roberto Maestri; Soccorso Capomolla; Maria Teresa La Rovere; Piotr Ponikowski; Luigi Tavazzi; Peter Sleight

19,462 (CI


American Heart Journal | 1997

Dobutamine and nitroprusside infusion in patients with severe congestive heart failure: Hemodynamic improvement by discordant effects on mitral regurgitation, left atrial function, and ventricular function

Soccorso Capomolla; Massimo Pozzoli; Cristina Opasich; Oreste Febo; G. Riccardi; Fabrizio Salvucci; Roberto Maestri; Massimo Sisti; Franco Cobelli; Luigi Tavazzi

13,904 to


American Journal of Cardiology | 1998

Reproducibility of the six-minute walking test in patients with chronic congestive heart failure: Practical implications

C. Opasich; Gian Domenico Pinna; Antonio Mazza; O. Febo; P.Giorgio Riccardi; Soccorso Capomolla; Franco Cobelli; Luigi Tavazzi

34,048). CONCLUSIONS A heart failure outpatient management program delivered by a DH can reduce mortality and morbidity of CHF patients. This management strategy is cost-effective and has an equitable value from a societal point of view. (J Am Coll Cardiol 2002;40:1259 ‐ 66)


American Journal of Cardiology | 1999

Association between hemodynamic impairment and cheyne-stokes respiration and periodic breathing in chronic stable congestive heart failure secondary to ischemic or idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy

Andrea Mortara; Peter Sleight; Gian Domenico Pinna; Roberto Maestri; Soccorso Capomolla; Oreste Febo; Maria Teresa La Rovere; Franco Cobelli

OBJECTIVES This study sought to 1) assess the short-, medium-and long-term prognostic power of peak oxygen consumption (VO2) in patients with heart failure; 2) verify the consistency of a nonmeasurable anaerobic threshold (AT) as a criterion of nonapplicability of peak VO2; 3) develop simple rules for the efficient use of peak VO2 in individualized prognostic stratification and clinical decision making. BACKGROUND Peak VO2, when AT is identified, is among the indicators for heart transplant eligibility. However, in clinical practice the application of defined peak VO2 cutoff values to all patients could be inappropriate and misleading. METHODS Six hundred fifty-three patients consecutively considered for eligibility for heart transplantation were followed up. Outcomes (cardiac death and urgent transplantation) were determined when all survivors had a minimum of 6 months of follow-up. RESULTS Contraindication to the exercise test identified very high risk patients. The relatively small sample of women did not allow inferences to be drawn. In men, peak VO2 stratified into three levels (< or = 10, 10 to 18 and >18 ml/kg per min) identified groups at high, medium and low risk, respectively. The prognostic power of peak VO2 < or = 10 ml/kg per min was maintained even when the AT was not detected. In patients in New York Heart Association functional class III or IV, peak VO2 did not have prognostic power. In patients in functional class I or II, peak VO2 stratification was prognostically valuable, but less so at 6 than at 12 or 24 months. Age did not influence peak VO2 prognostic stratification. CONCLUSIONS A contraindication to exercise testing should be considered a priority for listing patients for heart transplantation. Only in less symptomatic male patients does a peak VO2 < or = 10 ml/kg per min identify short-, medium- and long-term high risk groups. A peak VO2 >18 ml/kg per min implies good prognosis with medical therapy.

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Oreste Febo

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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G.D. Pinna

Research Medical Center

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A. Mortara

John Radcliffe Hospital

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