INTRODUCTION: The BRING-UP 3 Heart Failure (HF) study was designed to evaluate the real-world implementation of guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) for patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), given the limited evidence on the uptake of the contemporary four-pillar treatment strategy. METHODS: BRING-UP 3 HF study is an observational, prospective, nationwide investigation encompassing 179 sites. This analysis includes HFrEF patients enrolled in the ambulatory and hospitalized cohorts with complete pharmacological data at 6-month follow-up. The objective was to describe the use of the four GDMT pillars after 6 months. RESULTS: Among 3201 HFrEF patients enrolled, 142 (4.4%) had died by 6 months, and treatment data were available for 2950 patients. Mean age was 69 ± 11 years (26.6% > 75 years), 18.0% were female. Prescription rates of GDMT were high at baseline and remained stable over 6-months, with a shift from ACE-I/ARBs to ARNIs, and a modest increase in SGLT2i use. A significant reduction in diuretic prescription was also observed. Quadruple therapy was prescribed in 64.3% of patients at 6 months versus 63.9% at baseline/discharge (P = NS), while quadruple therapy including ARNI went from 52.9% to 55.9%, P < .0001. Dose up-titration of GDMT remained suboptimal, with most agents prescribed at <50% of target doses. Discontinuation rates at follow-up were very low. CONCLUSION: In this large nationwide cohort, guideline-directed therapies for HFrEF were widely implemented and maintained over 6 months with excellent treatment persistence. However, dose optimization remains a key unmet need in routine clinical practice. [BRING-UP 3 Heart Failure Investigators]
Medical treatments at 6 months in hospitalized and ambulatory HFrEF patients in the BRING-UP 3 Heart Failure study / F. Oliva, F.O.. - In: ESC HEART FAILURE. - ISSN 2055-5822. - 13:2(2026 Apr), pp. xvag043.1-xvag043.12. [10.1093/eschf/xvag043]
Medical treatments at 6 months in hospitalized and ambulatory HFrEF patients in the BRING-UP 3 Heart Failure study
S. Carugo;M. RescaldaniMembro del Collaboration Group
;M. PirondiniMembro del Collaboration Group
;S. CarugoMembro del Collaboration Group
;J. CampodonicoMembro del Collaboration Group
;A. CappelleriMembro del Collaboration Group
;G. PonticelliMembro del Collaboration Group
;M. PiepoliMembro del Collaboration Group
;L.A.F. Di Odoardo;M. MaccalliniMembro del Collaboration Group
;G. ForniMembro del Collaboration Group
;M. ProiettiMembro del Collaboration Group
;E. ConteMembro del Collaboration Group
;C. LeuzziMembro del Collaboration Group
;A. MartelliMembro del Collaboration Group
;A. IannuzziMembro del Collaboration Group
;G. ProvenzaleMembro del Collaboration Group
;P. CostaMembro del Collaboration Group
;
2026
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The BRING-UP 3 Heart Failure (HF) study was designed to evaluate the real-world implementation of guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) for patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), given the limited evidence on the uptake of the contemporary four-pillar treatment strategy. METHODS: BRING-UP 3 HF study is an observational, prospective, nationwide investigation encompassing 179 sites. This analysis includes HFrEF patients enrolled in the ambulatory and hospitalized cohorts with complete pharmacological data at 6-month follow-up. The objective was to describe the use of the four GDMT pillars after 6 months. RESULTS: Among 3201 HFrEF patients enrolled, 142 (4.4%) had died by 6 months, and treatment data were available for 2950 patients. Mean age was 69 ± 11 years (26.6% > 75 years), 18.0% were female. Prescription rates of GDMT were high at baseline and remained stable over 6-months, with a shift from ACE-I/ARBs to ARNIs, and a modest increase in SGLT2i use. A significant reduction in diuretic prescription was also observed. Quadruple therapy was prescribed in 64.3% of patients at 6 months versus 63.9% at baseline/discharge (P = NS), while quadruple therapy including ARNI went from 52.9% to 55.9%, P < .0001. Dose up-titration of GDMT remained suboptimal, with most agents prescribed at <50% of target doses. Discontinuation rates at follow-up were very low. CONCLUSION: In this large nationwide cohort, guideline-directed therapies for HFrEF were widely implemented and maintained over 6 months with excellent treatment persistence. However, dose optimization remains a key unmet need in routine clinical practice. [BRING-UP 3 Heart Failure Investigators]| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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