Randomized double‐blind clinical studies of ularitide and other vasoactive substances in acute decompensated heart failure: a systematic review and meta‐analysis

Abstract Aims Acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) has a poor prognosis and limited treatment options. No direct comparisons between ularitide—a synthetic natriuretic peptide being evaluated in ADHF—and other vasoactive substances are available. The aim of this meta‐analysis was to determine haemodynamic effect sizes from randomized double‐blind trials in ADHF. Methods and results Eligible studies enrolled patients with ADHF requiring hospitalization and haemodynamic monitoring. Patients received 24–48 h of infusion with a vasoactive substance or comparator. Primary outcome measure was pulmonary artery wedge pressure (PAWP). Treatment effects were quantified as changes from baseline using mean differences between study drug and comparator. Results were analysed using random‐effects (primary analysis) and fixed‐effects meta‐analyses. Twelve randomized, double‐blind studies were identified with data after 3, 6, and 24 h of treatment (n = 622, 644, and 644, respectively). At 6 h, significant PAWP benefits for ularitide over placebo were seen (Hedges' g effect size, −0.979; P < 0.0001). On meta‐analysis, treatment difference between ularitide and pooled other agents was statistically significant (−0.501; P = 0.0303). Effect sizes were numerically higher with ularitide than other treatments at 3 and 24 h. After 6 h, a significant difference in effect size between ularitide and all other treatments was observed for right atrial pressure (Hedges' g, −0.797 for ularitide and −0.304 for other treatments; P = 0.0274). Conclusions After 6 h, ularitide demonstrated high effect sizes for PAWP and right atrial pressure. Improvements in these parameters were greater with ularitide vs. pooled data for other vasoactive drugs.


Introduction
Acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) is the most common form of acute heart failure, with an estimated annual incidence in the USA of 11.6 per 1000 persons aged 55 years or older. 2 Inpatient treatment for ADHF has a poor prognosis, with a readmission rate of nearly 50% at 6 months and 1 year mortality of 30%. 3 Management of ADHF focuses on decongestion and symptom improvement, with treatment of precipitating events and co-morbid conditions. 3 No randomized trial has demonstrated a beneficial effect of any drug on ADHF prognosis. Indeed, inotropic agents-particularly cyclic adenosine monophosphate-generating drugs-increase myocardial oxygen consumption and induce arrhythmias 4 and may also increase mortality. 5 Similarly, long-term oral phosphodiesterase III inhibitor therapy increases mortality in severe chronic heart failure. 6 Recently, interest has focused on neurohormonal pathways underlying cardiac dysfunction and myocyte damage. Several drug classes have been developed to correct or mitigate disordered pathways and thereby preserve and protect myocytes. Natriuretic peptides are an endogenous family of structurally similar polypeptides that have vasodilatory, natriuretic, and antiproliferative effects on the heart. 7 Ularitide is a synthetic form of urodilatin, a kidney-derived natriuretic peptide involved in sodium and water homeostasis. 8 Ularitide binds primarily to the extracellular domain of natriuretic peptide receptor A, which is expressed in the heart, the kidney, vascular smooth muscle tissue, and other organs. Efficacy and tolerability of ularitide were established in the Phase 2 SIRIUS studies 1,9 ; a Phase 3 study (Trial of Ularitide Efficacy and Safety in Acute Heart Failure) has been presented and published however with neutral effect on primary endpoints. 10,11 Positive haemodynamic effects have also been demonstrated in studies with other vasoactive substances including nesiritide, a second natriuretic peptide (the Natrecor Study Group) 12 ; the calcium sensitizer levosimendan (the Levosimendan Infusion vs. Dobutamine (LIDO) study) 13 ; the endothelin-1 antagonist tezosentan (the Value of Endothelin Receptor Inhibition With Tezosentan in Acute Heart Failure Studies (VERITAS) studies) 14 ; cinaciguat, an activator of soluble guanylate cyclase 15 ; and serelaxin, a derivative of endogenous relaxin with vasodilator properties. 16 Some studies suggested improvements in morbidity or mortality, supporting further clinical development, but had neither the duration nor the statistical power to assess these endpoints accurately. Longer-term Phase 3 trials have not demonstrated reductions in mortality; thus, the role of vasoactive drugs in the management of ADHF remains uncertain. Furthermore, no head-to-head haemodynamic comparisons between vasoactive substances have yet been conducted in ADHF. Therefore, a systematic review was performed to demonstrate the evidence for treatment with ularitide in patients with ADHF.

Hypothesis and purpose
This meta-analysis was based on a pilot study including six studies -Safety and efficacy of an Intravenous placebo-controlled Randomized Infusion of Ularitide in a prospective double-blind Study (SIRIUS II), 1 VMAC, 17 LIDO, 13 VERITAS (low-dose tezosentan), 14 a cinaciguat study, 15 and a serelaxin study 16 comparing effect sizes on pulmonary artery wedge pressure (PAWP) using unadjusted (naïve) and placebo-adjusted data. Encouraging results led to a broader analysis that adhered to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. 18 The eligibility criteria for including randomized controlled trials and information sources, the outcomes to be analysed, and the study appraisal and synthesis methods were prospectively agreed by the authors in writing but not registered as a formal protocol.
The objective was to determine effect sizes from randomized double-blind haemodynamic studies that included 24-48 h of treatment with ularitide or other vasoactive substances vs. placebo or active comparator for intravenous treatment of ADHF.

Methods
This meta-analysis has been reported in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines 18 and the Cochrane Handbook. 19 No published study protocol exists for this systematic review.

Eligibility criteria
Eligible studies were conducted in patients with ADHF who required hospitalization and haemodynamic monitoring (right heart catheterization). All patients had lung congestion with elevated PAWP (variably defined as ≥15 to ≥20 mmHg) and were considered in need of acute intravenous therapy because of dyspnoea at rest or during minimal physical activity. All patients received an infusion with a vasoactive substance (or placebo/comparator) for 20-48 h plus standard therapy. Haemodynamic parameters were measured at baseline and after 2-4, 6-8, and 20-24 h. The primary endpoint was PAWP 6 h after starting infusion. Patients with chronic stable heart failure, for example, those in New York Heart Association Functional Class II, were excluded. Other exclusion criteria concerning the form or stage of heart failure, concomitant diseases, or history of significant illnesses, disallowed medication in the patient's history or at baseline, or disallowed conditions concerning the study conduct, were accepted as specified in individual studies.

Information sources
The German Institute of Medical Documentation and Information interface was used to search the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and MEDLINE®; MEDLINE was also searched using PubMed with the Research Information Systems interface. The ClinicalTrials.gov database was searched using the rclinicaltrials package. 20 This package provides a set of functions to interact with the search and download features of ClinicalTrials.gov. Results are downloaded to temporary directories and returned as R objects. Full search terms are listed in Supporting Information, Table S1.

Study selection
The search shown in Supporting Information, Table S1 resulted in 148 potentially eligible abstracts, which were independently checked for compliance with the eligibility 1024 V. Mitrovic et al. criteria by J. S. and four colleagues; 114 abstracts could be excluded on the basis of 10 working criteria. The remaining 34 publications were included in the full-text screening. The final selection was prepared by the group around J. S., but all decisions were made by the expert V. M.
From each study, we selected a study medication arm and placebo/active comparator arm. In studies with multiple treatment arms with different doses, the dose used according to the published Phase 3 studies was included. Data were collected from full-text publications (text, tables, and figures as far as digitization was possible).
Haemodynamic outcomes presented are PAWP, cardiac index, right atrial pressure (RAP), systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP), and systemic vascular resistance (SVR). Pulmonary vascular resistance, mixed venous oxygen saturation, and transpulmonary pressure gradient were not systematically reported in the original publications and could not, therefore, be included in the meta-analysis. Other outcomes of interest included serum creatinine, brain natriuretic peptide (BNP), and N-terminal pro-BNP (NT-proBNP)-analysed as a cluster-and mortality rate after~30 days.
Safety was evaluated in terms of rates of infusion discontinuation (total and due to adverse events) and rates of adverse events during infusion (total and serious).

Statistical methods
Fixed-effects and random-effects models were used to estimate pooled effect sizes from aggregate data. Because heterogeneity was expected in the synthesis of studies with preparations other than ularitide, the use of the randomeffects model was pre-specified for the primary analysis. Within single studies, treatment effects with respect to haemodynamic and specific laboratory parameters were quantified in terms of mean changes from baseline and transformed to standardized mean differences vs. comparator according to Hedges' g. 19 Safety data were quantified by risk ratios for the study treatment vs. comparator.
The risk of bias in the individual studies was assessed using the Cochrane risk of bias tool. 19 The comparison of effect sizes in different subgroups of studies, which is the main objective of meta-analysis, is based on a partitioning of the complete variation of the effect sizes in the variance of the true effect (true heterogeneity) and partly spurious heterogeneity, incorporating both (true) heterogeneity and random error. The so-called I 2 value gives the proportion of the (true) heterogeneity (in %) of the complete variation of the effect sizes. I 2 is calculated from Cochran's Q value by mean of I 2 = [Q À (k À 1)]∕Q with the number of studies k, and Q is the weighted sum of squared distances of the

Identified studies
German Institute of Medical Documentation and PubMed searches identified 148 potentially eligible publications. No additional completed studies were identified by the ClinicalTrials.gov search. Screening of abstracts excluded all, but 34 publications were reduced to 11 after full-text review ( Figure 1). 1,9,[12][13][14][15][16][17][23][24][25] Details of these studies are shown in Table 1. Available outcome measures per study and per time point after baseline (3, 6, and 24 h) are presented in Supporting Information, Table S2. All studies were doubleblind, randomized, controlled clinical trials vs. placebo (n = 10, including the first 3 h of the VMAC study 17 ) and/or active comparator (n = 2, including the VMAC 17 study from 3 h onwards; data with nitroglycerin therapy from 0 to 3 h in VMAC were ignored in favour of the placebo data). In addition to the nitroglycerin arm in VMAC, 17 active comparators were used in LIDO (dobutamine 5 μg/kg/min), 13 and Nieminen et al. (dobutamine 6 μg/kg/min). 24 However, the dobutamine arm and an ethanol vehicle arm in the Nieminen et al. study were not included in the meta-analysis, because these arms were not blinded. 24 The Torre-Amione et al. study 25 used two doses of tezosentan (50 and 100 mg/h) that were substantially higher than the preferred dose of 1 mg/h in VERITAS. 14 The 50 mg/h dose was selected after showing that both arms resulted in almost identical effect sizes for the main parameter (PAWP) after 6 h (data not shown).
Studies were categorized into seven 'main' studies and four 'pilot' studies (Supporting Information, Table S3). Main studies were placebo controlled (≤3 h, n = 6; >3 h, n = 5) or active controlled (≤3 h, n = 1; >3 h, n = 2); all pilot studies were placebo controlled. In total, 622 patients were included for the 3 h analysis and 644 for the 6 and 24 h analyses. The comparator groups consisted of 520 and 543 patients, respectively.
Baseline characteristics are summarized in Table 2 for the controlled main studies.

Risk of bias within studies
Sequence generation, allocation concealment, and blinding of study arms were regarded as adequate in all studies except VERITAS. 14 In VERITAS, the low-dose tezosentan arm was a small subgroup of a larger trial, with no information provided on stratified randomization. 14 Outcome data were incompletely reported (missing data on patient disposition) in VERITAS, 14 Nieminen et al., 24 and Erdmann et al. 15 In VMAC, 17 complete presentation of the initial study phase (3 h) is available (nesiritide vs. nitroglycerin vs. placebo), but the subsequent study phase (>3 h; nesiritide vs. nitroglycerin) was selectively reported. In the LIDO study, 13 PAWP was the only endpoint suitable for the meta-analysis.

Heterogeneity assessment
Studies with ularitide yielded I 2 of 0% in all analyses. While this is obviously true if only one study is considered, because the distinction between the fixed-effects and random-effects models has no meaning, no heterogeneity occurred when both ularitide studies were included, either. The synthesis of other studies showed several cases of heterogeneity indicating differences between the effect sizes of the other study treatments. Significant and quantitatively high heterogeneity was observed for cardiac index and SVR after 6 h. The primary analysis in all controlled main studies showed a moderate (~50%) but insignificant heterogeneity. No heterogeneity was detected for PAWP in placebo-controlled main studies at 6 h (Supporting Information, Table S4).

Course of haemodynamic parameters in the controlled main studies
Change in PAWP at 6 h with ularitide vs. placebo was numerically greater than with other agents vs. comparators ( Figure 2). Similar but less marked differences between agents were seen at 3 and 24 h (Supporting Information, Figure S1A). Changes in cardiac index at 3, 6, and 24 h varied widely between compounds and were greatest with cinaciguat (Supporting Information, Figure S1B).
In controlled main studies, PAWP improved after 3 and 6 h of active treatment and generally remained stable or declined slightly after 24 h ( Figure 3A). The placebo curve, calculated by meta-analytical synthesis of all placebo curves from placebo-controlled clinical trials, was located in a low-effect region of changes from baseline in PAWP. Thus, significant differences between study drug and comparator were generally observed after 6 h (except for levosimendan vs. dobutamine and serelaxin vs. placebo; Figure 3A). Cardiac index increased ( Figure 3B), and RAP, SBP, DBP, and SVR decreased after 3-6 h of treatment vs. placebo or active comparator.

Meta-analysis of pulmonary arterial wedge pressure at 6 h
Meta-analysis of changes from baseline in PAWP after 6 h of treatment with ularitide vs. placebo in the SIRIUS II study 1 produced a Hedges' g effect size of À0.979 (P < 0.0001). With the other compounds vs. comparators in controlled main studies, the Hedges' g effect size was À0.478 (P < 0.0001) ( Figure 4A). The treatment difference between ularitide compared with the synthesis of all other controlled main studies [À0.501; 95% confidence interval (CI): À0.954, À0.048] was statistically significant (P = 0.0303).
Sensitivity meta-analyses of primary and secondary haemodynamic endpoints are detailed in Supporting Information, Appendix S1.

Meta-analyses of additional haemodynamic endpoints in placebo-controlled main studies
Additional haemodynamic endpoints were analysed only in placebo-controlled main studies, as they were not reported in the two active-controlled studies.
After 6 h, a significant increase in cardiac index and significant decreases in RAP, SBP, DBP, and SVR were observed, with somewhat larger effect sizes for ularitide vs. placebo compared with the pooled effect sizes for other study treatments vs. placebo. A significant difference was seen only for RAP (Hedges' g, À0.797 for ularitide and À0.304 for other treatments; P = 0.0274 for ularitide vs. synthesis of all other Meta-analysis of ularitide and other treatment for ADHF (placebo-)controlled main studies; Figure 4B). Further details are shown in Supporting Information, Table S5.

Meta-analyses of other endpoints
The BNP/NT-proBNP cluster analysis showed no statistically significant changes from baseline after 6 h of treatment, although there was a parallel significant decrease after 24 h with both ularitide and other treatments (Supporting Information, Table S6). Serum creatinine showed slight changes from baseline after 24 h (Supporting Information, Table S6); in the analysis of other treatments, this was the result of contrary results with levosimendan (Hedges' g, À0.512; P = 0.0006) and tezosentan (Hedges' g, 0.452; P = 0.0024).

Meta-analyses of safety results
In placebo-controlled main studies, no significant treatment differences between ularitide and other treatments were detected in terms of infusion discontinuation, infusion discontinuation due to adverse events, or incidences of adverse events or serious adverse events during infusion (Supporting Information, Table S7).

Discussion
In this meta-analysis, PAWP-the primary endpoint in the trials and a proxy for left ventricular end-diastolic pressurewas reduced significantly by ularitide vs. placebo. There were numerical improvements with ularitide vs. other pooled study treatments, with a significant difference at 6 h in controlled main studies. The magnitude of improvement with ularitide in SIRIUS II 1 was greater than in the other individual main studies ( Figure 2). 1,[13][14][15][16][17]25 Right atrial pressure (a proxy for right ventricular end-diastolic pressure) also showed favourable effects for ularitide vs. all other treatments pooled. Effects on other haemodynamic parameters showed no significant differences between ularitide and other study treatments at any time point. Although the comparator substances in this meta-analysis vary in their mechanisms of action, all produce primarily vasodilatation without positive inotropic effects. The authors therefore believe that comparisons between them are possible.
The results of the present study are consistent with previous meta-analyses of vasoactive drugs. A meta-analysis comparing vasodilators and inotropes showed that the two classes reduce left-sided and right-sided filling pressures to a similar degree in patients with acute heart failure and reduced left ventricular ejection fraction. 26 While PAWP can be considered as a proxy for left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP), it must be emphasized that patients with high-grade mitral regurgitation or clinically relevant mitral stenosis were excluded from the trials so that it can be assumed that PAWP correlates with LVEDP. There are no data available on the percentage of patients with atrial fibrillation in the included studies so that a corresponding analysis could not be performed.
Safety was not a main endpoint of this analysis, although ularitide seems to have similar tolerability to the comparators in terms of discontinuations and infusion-related adverse events, with no signal of increased mortality with any treatment. Safety data in the current study should be viewed with caution because of the limited size and duration of the included studies and the large CIs of the estimates. In a meta-analysis of drugs and medical treatment algorithms, the authors concluded that ularitide is a promising novel therapy for ADHF. 27 If confirmed, the combination of haemodynamic efficacy and good tolerability with ularitide would suggest a favourable risk-benefit profile.
Mortality in Phase 2 studies was generally lower in patients receiving active treatment vs. controls, leading to the development of Phase 3 trials, although no definitive improvement of mortality could be shown. This was also the case in two Phase 3 trials presented or published after the present analysis was conducted. In the Trial of Ularitide Efficacy and Safety in Acute Heart Failure study, 2157 patients with AHF received standard therapy plus either a continuous intravenous infusion of ularitide 15 ng/kg/min or matching placebo for 48 h. 11 Compared with placebo, ularitide reduced systolic blood pressure and NT-proBNP (considered a marker of left ventricular pressure/volume overload) and favourably influenced markers of congestion such as haemoglobin and transaminases. There were, however, no significant differences between treatment arms in death from cardiovascular causes during median follow-up of 15 months nor in a hierarchical composite endpoint evaluating disease course during the 48 h treatment period. The absence of significant prognostic benefit appears to be the result of enrolment of ineligible patients, as a post hoc analysis excluding patients identified as ineligible for the trial suggested a reduction in the hierarchical endpoint with ularitide. 11 In the serelaxin in addition to standard therapy in acute heart failure study,~6600 patients hospitalized for AHF were randomized to standard care plus either 48 h intravenous infusion of serelaxin (30 μg/kg/day) or placebo. 28 There was no significant difference between serelaxin and placebo with regard to either co-primary endpoint: 180 day cardiovascular death and worsening heart failure through 1030 V. Mitrovic et al.
Day 5. Nesiritide was reported to improve readmission rates and survival compared with dobutamine in a meta-analysis 29 but did not reduce mortality in the placebo-controlled Phase 3 ASCEND-HF study 30 or a later meta-analysis. 31 A Phase 3 mortality trial involving cinaciguat was terminated prematurely because of a high incidence of hypotension. 15 Overall, therefore, there is no clear evidence for the optimal treatment to improve prognosis in ADHF. None of the vasoactive agents examined in the present analysis have a level of recommendation 1A for intravenous administration, so the search for new substances with different mechanisms of action is ongoing.
There are several possible reasons why the favourable haemodynamic effects obtained in proof-of-concept Phase 2 studies, as well as improvements in other surrogate markers such as NT-proBNP, haemoglobin, and transaminases in some studies, did not result in a significant decrease of mortality after approximately 180 days during the Phase 3 trials. These include short duration of infusion time (24-48 h), fixed treatment dose regimen, protocol violations and the failure to use guideline-directed therapy in the majority of Phase 2 trials. The hypothesis underlying the use of vasoactive substances in ADHF-that rapid reversal of ventricular wall stress preserves myocardial viability-may itself be plausible, but cannot be translated into a mortality benefit. 11 Another possibility is that the reduction of micro-myocardial injury by unloading the ventricle is insufficient to influence long-term outcomes. 11 There are numerous challenges in conducting clinical trials in acute heart failure. 32 Many clinicians have rejected the expressions 'systolic heart failure' and 'diastolic heart failure' in favour of 'heart failure with reduced ejection fraction' and 'heart failure with preserved ejection fraction' because they describe the results of cardiac function testing, and abnormal systole and diastole can occur in the same patient. Pathophysiology of this condition, which can include myocardial ischaemia, arrhythmia, valve dysfunction, or volume overload, is poorly understood, and for many years it was not recognized as a distinct entity. Lack of objective diagnostic criteria means that populations are heterogeneous, making it difficult to develop clear inclusion criteria. This is complicated by differing regulatory requirements for trials in acute heart failure between countries. There is no agreement among physicians and decision makers on therapy goals and trial endpoints in ADHF, and no clear links between haemodynamic endpoints and clinical outcomes. ADHF of differing aetiology may not respond in the same way to a given intervention. Haemodynamic parameters are not a reliable guide to dosing of novel therapies, although some can act as surrogates for symptoms (e.g. PAWP and dyspnoea). Comparisons across studies are complicated by different timing and duration of interventions, as well as differing definitions of 'standard therapy'. It is unclear whether novel therapies should be evaluated as monotherapy or as add-ons, particularly given the relatively low cost of conventional therapies.
Administration of intravenous diuretics (furosemide 40-80 mg) before initiation of study therapy was mandatory in the trials included in this analysis. No intravenous administration of diuretics was allowed during the study unless the patients showed a clinically relevant haemodynamic deterioration (worsening heart failure). There are no randomized haemodynamic placebo-controlled trials with diuretics, and therefore, the effects of concomitant diuretics on the endpoints studied here cannot be ascertained.

Limitations of the meta-analysis
The key limitation of the present meta-analysis is the small number of studies available and their small size and short duration. Much of the data were extracted from published graphs by digitization (Supporting Information, Appendix S1). Based on the included studies, there were insufficient data to analyse several additional outcomes of interest, including pulmonary vascular resistance, the percentage of patients with an increased pre-capillary pulmonary artery pressure, pressure gradients between PAWP and the pulmonary vasculature, and oxygen saturation in the systemic and pulmonary circulations. Pulmonary vascular resistance was not available for the ularitide studies, and therefore, we cannot compare its effects on this parameter with other vasoactive substances. Similarly, we cannot speculate on the effects of ularitide on the pulmonary vs. the systemic circulation. According to the original publications, other vasoactive substances reduce pulmonary vascular resistance and SVR, with no preferential effect on the pulmonary circulation. The present publications had no data on oxygen saturation within the systemic and pulmonary circulations. Consequently, the role of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction in the results observed is not known. Furthermore, only patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction were enrolled in the included studies so that no extrapolation of data on heart failure with preserved ejection fraction is possible. Finally, no correction for multiple comparisons was carried out as part of the statistical analysis.
There is currently no international consensus on how to measure PAWP, which can be measured in end-expiratory apnoea or during quiet respiration at a specified point before the inspiratory dip of the pressure curve. 33,34 This is, however, extremely difficult in patients with Cheyne-Stokes respiration and in atrial fibrillation. The most common practice, especially in the intensive care units and cardiac catheterization laboratories, is to use a computer-generated pressure measurement during quiet breathing over a period of 5 s. These computer-generated wedge pressure measurements are consistently and significantly lower than the results obtained during expiration. An accurate haemodynamic manual exists for the trials with ularitide, levosimendan, cinaciguat, and serelaxin. In all these trials, Meta-analysis of ularitide and other treatment for ADHF PAWP was measured at the end of expiration during slight apnoea while the patient's mouth was open to avoid Valsalva pressing. In other trials, such as those with tezosentan and nesiritide, PAWP was measured during expiration.
Furthermore, there is also no consensus among experts on how to perform levelling and determination of the zero point. According to several publications, the zero point or zero reference level is generally recommended to be set at the level of the right atrium or tricuspid valve. 35,36 In practice, the most frequently used zero level in the supine patient is at mid-thoracic level or at one-third of the thoracic diameter below the anterior thorax surface. According to the computed tomography study performed by Kovacz, one-third of the thoracic diameter mostly represents the right atrium, while the left atrium is represented best by the mid-thoracic level. 37 In the studies performed with ularitide, levosimendan, serelaxin, and cinaciguat, the zero level was set at one-third of the thoracic diameter below the anterior thorax surface, as per the haemodynamic manuals. In the trials with tezosentan and nesiritide, the zero level was set at the midthoracic level. Baseline levels of PAWP in all these trials were similar, regardless of how PAWP was measured and how levelling was performed so that it was possible to analyse differences between the drugs.
In conclusion, ularitide demonstrated high effect sizes with respect to PAWP and RAP after 6 h of treatment. The haemodynamic improvements seen with ularitide, combined with its beneficial effects on renal function, dyspnoea, myocardial structure, and endothelin levels, 8 suggest that ularitide may be a promising drug for recompensation of patients with ADHF.

Funding
This study, including design and conduct; collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data; preparation, review, and approval of the manuscript; and decision to submit the manuscript for publication, was funded and supported entirely by PHARIS Biotec GmbH.
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