Aficamten and Cardiopulmonary Exercise Test Performance: A Substudy of the SEQUOIA-HCM Randomized Clinical Trial.
Importance
Impaired exercise capacity is a cardinal manifestation of obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). The Phase 3 Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of Aficamten Compared to Placebo in Adults With Symptomatic Obstructive HCM (SEQUOIA-HCM) is a pivotal study characterizing the treatment effect of aficamten, a next-in-class cardiac myosin inhibitor, on a comprehensive set of exercise performance and clinical measures.
Objective
To evaluate the effect of aficamten on exercise performance using cardiopulmonary exercise testing with a novel integrated measure of maximal and submaximal exercise performance and evaluate other exercise measures and clinical correlates.
Design, setting, and participants
This was a prespecified analysis from SEQUOIA-HCM, a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial. Patients were recruited from 101 sites in 14 countries (North America, Europe, Israel, and China). Individuals with symptomatic obstructive HCM with objective exertional intolerance (peak oxygen uptake [pVO2] ≤90% predicted) were included in the analysis. Data were analyzed from January to March 2024.
Interventions
Randomized 1:1 to aficamten (5-20 mg daily) or matching placebo for 24 weeks.
Main outcomes and measures
The primary outcome was change from baseline to week 24 in integrated exercise performance, defined as the 2-component z score of pVO2 and ventilatory efficiency throughout exercise (minute ventilation [VE]/carbon dioxide output [VCO2] slope). Response rates for achieving clinically meaningful thresholds for change in pVO2 and correlations with clinical measures of treatment effect (health status, echocardiographic/cardiac biomarkers) were also assessed.
Results
Among 282 randomized patients (mean [SD] age, 59.1 [12.9] years; 115 female [40.8%], 167 male [59.2%]), 263 (93.3%) had core laboratory-validated exercise testing at baseline and week 24. Integrated composite exercise performance improved in the aficamten group (mean [SD] z score, 0.17 [0.51]) from baseline to week 24, whereas the placebo group deteriorated (mean [SD] z score, -0.19 [0.45]), yielding a placebo-corrected improvement of 0.35 (95% CI, 0.25-0.46; P <.001). Further, aficamten treatment demonstrated significant improvements in total workload, circulatory power, exercise duration, heart rate reserve, peak heart rate, ventilatory efficiency, ventilatory power, and anaerobic threshold (all P <.001). In the aficamten group, large improvements (≥3.0 mL/kg per minute) in pVO2 were more common than large reductions (32% and 2%, respectively) compared with placebo (16% and 11%, respectively). Improvements in both components of the primary outcome, pVO2 and VE/VCO2 slope throughout exercise, were significantly correlated with improvements in symptom burden and hemodynamics (all P <.05).
Conclusions and relevance
This prespecified analysis of the SEQUOIA-HCM randomized clinical trial found that aficamten treatment improved a broad range of exercise performance measures. These findings offer valuable insight into the therapeutic effects of aficamten.
Trial registration
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05186818.
Overview publication
Title | Aficamten and Cardiopulmonary Exercise Test Performance: A Substudy of the SEQUOIA-HCM Randomized Clinical Trial. |
Date | 2024-11-01 |
Issue name | JAMA cardiology |
Issue number | v9.11:990-1000 |
DOI | 10.1001/jamacardio.2024.2781 |
PubMed | 39230885 |
Authors | |
Info | SEQUOIA-HCM Investigators, Wang A, Sherrid MV, Kelly JP, Marian AJ, Owens AT, Wever-Pinzon O, Owens D, Wheeler MT, Nagueh SF, Rader F, McGrew FA, Wong T, O'Neill T, Bach RG, Martinez M, Lakdawala NK, Collado E, Turer A, Desai Y M, Hussain Z, Tower-Rader AF, Hannawi B, Geske J, Saberi S, Phelan D, Kramer C, Sarswat N, Ahmad F, Choudhury L, Markowitz JS, Sen S, Bering P, Maron MS, Jani S, Brinkley D, Naidu S, Maurer MS, Moss N, Bilen O, Silva Enciso J, Fraser R, Akinboboye O, Asher C, Emani S, Sharma A, Fermin D, Lyle M, Raymer D, Darlington A, Resnic F, Nielsen CD, Metra M, Musumeci B, Emdin M, Targetti M, Canepa M, Michels M, Knackstedt C, Amin AS, Barriales Villa R, Garcia Pavia P, Gimeno Blanes JR, Hidalgo Urbano RJ, Rincon Diaz LM, Ripoll Vera TVV, Garcia Alvarez A, Zemanek D, Jensen M, Mogensen J, Thune JJ, Bundgaard H, Charron P, Trochu JN, Habib G, Lhermusier T, Reant P, Hagege AA, Logeart D, Mitrovic V, Edelmann F, Seidler T, Meder B, Schulze PC, Stoerk S, Bekfani T, Rassaf T, Merkely B, Arad M, Halabi M, Zwas D, Piltz X, Paz O, Habib M, Dudek D, Oreziak A, Wojakowski W, Toste Batista AM, Mesquita Bastos JA, Elliott PM, Mahmod M, Coats C, Cooper R, Bradlow W, Pantazis A, Tome Esteban MT, McGinnis S, Campain J, Cocca-Spofford D, Giverts I, Griskowitz C, Newlands C, Moreno FM |
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