• Chest · Apr 2016

    SERVE-HF: More Questions than Answers.

    • Shahrokh Javaheri, Lee K Brown, Winfried Randerath, and Rami Khayat.
    • Sleep Laboratory, Bethesda North Hospital, Cincinnati, OH. Electronic address: shahrokhjavaheri@icloud.com.
    • Chest. 2016 Apr 1; 149 (4): 900-4.

    AbstractThe recent online publication of the SERVE-HF trial that evaluated the effect of treating central sleep apnea (CSA) with an adaptive servoventilation (ASV) device in patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) has raised serious concerns about the safety of ASV in these patients. Not only was ASV ineffective but post hoc analysis found excess cardiovascular mortality in treated patients. The authors cited as one explanation an unfounded notion that CSA is a compensatory mechanism with a protective effect in HFrEF patients. We believe that there are several possible considerations that are more likely to explain the results of SERVE-HF. In this commentary, we consider methodological issues including the use of a previous-generation ASV device that constrained therapeutic settings to choices that are no longer in wide clinical use. Patient selection, data collection, and treatment adherence as well as group crossovers were not discussed in the trial as potential confounding factors. We have developed alternative reasons that could potentially explain the results and that can be explored by post hoc analysis of the SERVE-HF data. We believe that our analysis is of critical value to the field and of particular importance to clinicians treating these patients.Copyright © 2016 American College of Chest Physicians. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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