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Browsing by Author "Atar, Dan"

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Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
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  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
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    Baseline Characteristics of Patients With Heart Failure and Preserved Ejection Fraction in the PARAGON-HF Trial
    (2018)
    Solomon, Scott D.
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    Rizkala, Adel R.
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    Lefkowitz, Martin P.
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    Shi, Victor C.
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    Gong, JianJian
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    Anavekar, Nagesh
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    Anker, Stefan D.  
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    Arango, Juan L.
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    Arenas, Jose L.
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    Atar, Dan
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    Ben-Gal, Turia
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    Boytsov, Sergey A.
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    Chen, Chen-Huan
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    Chopra, Vijay K.
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    Cleland, John
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    Comin-Colet, Josep
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    Duengen, Hans-Dirk
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    Echeverría Correa, Luis E.
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    Filippatos, Gerasimos
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    Flammer, Andreas J.
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    Galinier, Michel
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    Godoy, Armando
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    Goncalvesova, Eva
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    Janssens, Stefan
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    Katova, Tzvetana
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    Køber, Lars
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    Lelonek, Małgorzata
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    Linssen, Gerard
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    Lund, Lars H.
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    O’Meara, Eileen
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    Merkely, Béla
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    Milicic, Davor
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    Oh, Byung-Hee
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    Perrone, Sergio V.
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    Ranjith, Naresh
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    Saito, Yoshihiko
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    Saraiva, Jose F.
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    Shah, Sanjiv
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    Seferovic, Petar M.
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    Senni, Michele
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    Sibulo, Antonio S.
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    Sim, David
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    Sweitzer, Nancy K.
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    Taurio, Jyrki
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    Vinereanu, Dragos
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    Vrtovec, Bojan
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    Widimský, Jiří
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    Yilmaz, Mehmet B.
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    Zhou, Jingmin
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    Zweiker, Robert
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    Anand, Inder S.
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    Ge, Junbo
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    Lam, Carolyn S.P.
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    Maggioni, Aldo P.
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    Martinez, Felipe
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    Packer, Milton
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    Pfeffer, Marc A.
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    Pieske, Burkert  
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    Redfield, Margaret M.
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    Rouleau, Jean L.
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    Van Veldhuisen, Dirk J.
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    Zannad, Faiez
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    Zile, Michael R.
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    McMurray, John J.V.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
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    Erratum to “Traditional and new composite endpoints in heart failure clinical trials: facilitating comprehensive efficacy assessments and improving trial efficiency” [Eur J Heart Fail 2016;18:482-489]
    (2016)
    Anker, Stefan D.  
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    Schroeder, Stefan
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    Atar, Dan
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    Bax, Jeroen J.
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    Ceconi, Claudio
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    Cowie, Martin R.
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    Crisp, Adam
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    Dominjon, Fabienne
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    Ford, Ian
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    Ghofrani, Hossein-Ardeschir
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    Gropper, Savion
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    Hindricks, Gerhard
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    Hlatky, Mark A.
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    Holcomb, Richard
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    Honarpour, Narimon
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    Jukema, J. Wouter
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    Kim, Albert M.
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    Kunz, Michael
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    Lefkowitz, Martin
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    Floch, Chantal Le
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    Landmesser, Ulf
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    McDonagh, Theresa A.
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    McMurray, John J.
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    Merkely, Bela
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    Packer, Milton
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    Prasad, Krishna
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    Revkin, James
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    Rosano, Giuseppe M.C.
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    Somaratne, Ransi
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    Stough, Wendy Gattis
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    Voors, Adriaan A.
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    Ruschitzka, Frank
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Improving clinical trials for cardiovascular diseases: a position paper from the Cardiovascular Round Table of the European Society of Cardiology
    (2016)
    Jackson, Neville
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    Atar, Dan
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    Borentain, Maria
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    Breithardt, Günter
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    van Eickels, Martin
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    Endres, Matthias
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    Fraass, Uwe
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    Friede, Tim  
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    Hannachi, Hakima
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    Janmohamed, Salim
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    Kreuzer, Joerg
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    Landray, Martin
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    Lautsch, Dominik
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    Le Floch, Chantal
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    Mol, Peter
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    Naci, Huseyin
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    Samani, Nilesh J.
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    Svensson, Anders
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    Thorstensen, Cathrine
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    Tijssen, Jan
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    Vandzhura, Victoria
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    Zalewski, Andrew
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    Kirchhof, Paulus
    Aims Cardiovascular disease is the most common cause of mortality and morbidity in the world, but the pharmaceutical industry's willingness to invest in this field has declined because of the many challenges involved with bringing new cardiovascular drugs to market, including late-stage failures, escalating regulatory requirements, bureaucracy of the clinical trial business enterprise, and limited patient access after approval. This contrasts with the remaining burden of cardiovascular disease in Europe and in the world. Thus, clinical cardiovascular research needs to adapt to address the impact of these challenges in order to ensure development of new cardiovascular medicines. Methods and results The present paper is the outcome of a two-day workshop held by the Cardiovascular Round Table of the European Society of Cardiology. We propose strategies to improve development of effective new cardiovascular therapies. These can include (i) the use of biomarkers to describe patients who will benefit from new therapies more precisely, achieving better human target validation; (ii) targeted, mechanism-based approaches to drug development for defined populations; (iii) the use of information technology to simplify data collection and follow-up in clinical trials; (iv) streamlining adverse event collection and reducing monitoring; (v) extended patent protection or limited rapid approval of new agents to motivate investment in early phase development; and (vi) collecting data needed for health technology assessment continuously throughout the drug development process (before and after approval) to minimize delays in patient access. Collaboration across industry, academia, regulators, and payers will be necessary to enact change and to unlock the existing potential for cardiovascular clinical drug development. Conclusions A coordinated effort involving academia, regulators, industry, and payors will help to foster better and more effective conduct of clinical cardiovascular trials, supporting earlier availability of innovative therapies and better management of cardiovascular diseases.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Traditional and new composite endpoints in heart failure clinical trials: facilitating comprehensive efficacy assessments and improving trial efficiency
    (Wiley-blackwell, 2016)
    Anker, Stefan-D.  
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    Schroeder, Stefan
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    Atar, Dan
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    Bax, Jeroen J.
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    Ceconi, Claudio
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    Cowie, Martin R.
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    AdamCrisp, AdamCrisp
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    Dominjon, Fabienne
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    Ford, Ian
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    Ghofrani, Hossein-Ardeschir
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    Gropper, Savion
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    Hindricks, Gerhard
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    Hlatky, Mark A.
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    Holcomb, Richard
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    Honarpour, Narimon
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    Jukema, J. Wouter
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    Kim, Albert M.
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    Kunz, Michael
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    Lefkowitz, Martin
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    Le Floch, Chantal
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    Landmesser, Ulf
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    McDonagh, Theresa A.
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    McMurray, John J. V.
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    Merkely, Bela
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    Packer, Milton
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    Prasad, Krishna
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    Revkin, James
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    Rosano, Giuseppe M. C.
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    Somaratne, Ransi
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    Stough, Wendy Gattis
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    Voors, Adriaan A.
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    Ruschitzka, Frank
    Composite endpoints are commonly used as the primary measure of efficacy in heart failure clinical trials to assess the overall treatment effect and to increase the efficiency of trials. Clinical trials still must enrol large numbers of patients to accrue a sufficient number of outcome events and have adequate power to draw conclusions about the efficacy and safety of new treatments for heart failure. Additionally, the societal and health system perspectives on heart failure have raised interest in ascertaining the effects of therapy on outcomes such as repeat hospitalization and the patient's burden of disease. Thus, novel methods for using composite endpoints in clinical trials (e.g. clinical status composite endpoints, recurrent event analyses) are being applied in current and planned trials. Endpoints that measure functional status or reflect the patient experience are important but used cautiously because heart failure treatments may improve function yet have adverse effects on mortality. This paper discusses the use of traditional and new composite endpoints, identifies qualities of robust composites, and outlines opportunities for future research.

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