Language

English

Publication Date

5-14-2025

Journal

European Heart Journal

DOI

10.1093/eurheartj/ehaf120

PMID

39943738

Abstract

Heart failure with reduced or preserved ejection fraction is associated with elevated left atrial pressure at rest due to fluid overload or during exercise, leading to pulmonary venous congestion. Even with available treatments, heart failure hospitalizations remain high, and improvements in quality-of-life scores and functional capacity are modest. Thus, there is growing interest in non-pharmacological methods to decompress the left atrium and improve heart failure symptoms and outcomes. Left-to-right shunts have emerged as a potential therapeutic option to reduce left atrial hypertension, improve quality of life, and impact long-term outcomes. This nascent field carries both potential therapeutic promise and many unanswered questions. Recent data have questioned whether the effects of this therapy vary based on the left ventricular ejection fraction, pulmonary vascular resistance, and/or right ventricular structure and function. This review discusses the basis for left-to-right shunt therapies, synthesizes past and ongoing clinical trials, and offers future directions.

Keywords

Humans, Heart Failure, Stroke Volume, Quality of Life, Vascular Resistance, Atrial shunt, Coronary sinus, Exercise haemodynamic testing, Heart failure, Interatrial shunt device, Pulmonary vascular disease

Published Open-Access

yes

m_ehaf120_ga_1.jpeg (63 kB)
Graphical Abstract

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