ResMed (NYSE: RMD) has announced that SERVE-HF, a multinational, multicenter, randomised controlled Phase IV trial did not meet its primary endpoint.
SERVE-HF was designed to assess whether the treatment of moderate to severe predominant central sleep apnea with Adaptive Servo-Ventilation (ASV) therapy could reduce mortality and morbidity in patients with symptomatic chronic heart failure in addition to optimised medical care.
The study did not show a statistically significant difference between patients randomised to ASV therapy and those in the control group in the primary endpoint of time to all-cause mortality or unplanned hospitalisation for worsening heart failure (based on a hazard ratio [HR] = 1.136, 95 per cent confidence interval [95% CI] = (0.974, 1.325), p-value = 0.104).
The results from SERVE-HF are preliminary and will be submitted for future publication after further analysis.
A preliminary analysis of the data identified a statistically significant 2.5 per cent absolute increased risk of cardiovascular mortality for those patients in the trial who received ASV therapy per year compared to those in the control group.
In the study, the cardiovascular mortality rate in the ASV group was 10 percent per year compared to 7.5 percent per year in the control group. There were no issues associated with the performance of the ASV therapy device in the trial.
“Patient safety is our first and foremost priority. We have alerted and are working with appropriate global regulatory authorities about the safety signal observed in this study,” said Dr Glenn Richards, ResMed Chief Medical Officer.
“The safety signal in SERVE-HF was observed only with the use of ASV therapy in people who have predominant central sleep apnea and symptomatic chronic heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. We are further analysing the data to understand why this unexpected result was observed in this trial,” he said.
The company said that it is working with global regulatory authorities to proactively revise the labels and instructions for use for ResMed ASV devices to include a contraindication for people with symptomatic chronic heart failure (with left ventricular ejection fraction, LVEF, less than or equal to 45 percent). it is also proactively informing healthcare providers, physicians, and patients of the cardiovascular safety signal observed in SERVE-HF.
"The safety signal observed in SERVE-HF was observed only with ASV therapy in patients with moderate to severe predominant central sleep apnea and symptomatic chronic heart failure with reduced ejection fraction," it said. "The study did not include people with central sleep apnea in the absence of heart failure. It is also important to note that SERVE-HF did not include any patients with predominant obstructive sleep apnea, and did not include any other treatment modality such as continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) or auto-adjusting positive airway pressure (APAP)."
According to Professor Martin Cowie, the co-principal investigator of the study and Professor of Cardiology at Imperial College, London, "SERVE-HF did not meet its primary endpoint, however this study provides valuable, practice-changing guidance on how to best care for people with chronic heart failure."
He continued, "SERVE-HF was a well-designed and executed study and because of it we now know that ASV therapy should not be used to treat central sleep apnea in people with symptomatic chronic heart failure with reduced ejection fraction.”