Effect of Dietary Nitrate Ingestion in Heart Failure (DiNOmo-HF)
Heart Failure, Heart Failure, Systolic
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Heart Failure focused on measuring Heart Failure, Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction, Nitric Oxide, Inorganic Nitrate
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Age ≥18 years
Diagnosed with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction on the basis of:
- LVEF ≤50% as assessed by Echocardiography (or cardiac MRI)
raised BNP and/or NT-proBNP levels placing patients in the "high risk" category, to ensure heart failure is the cause of symptoms:
- stable heart failure: NT-proBNP >600pg/mL and BNP >150pg/mL
- hospitalisation within 12 months: NT-proBNP >400pg/mL and BNP >100pg/mL
- NYHA Class II-III symptoms
- On optimally-tolerated, stable (>12 weeks) prognostic medical therapy (beta-blocker, ACE-inhibitor or ARB, mineralocorticoid therapy if deemed necessary)
- No heart failure-related hospitalisation for >12 weeks
- Clinic systolic blood pressure ≥95mmHg
- Able and willing to give written informed consent
The intervention with dietary nitrate is intentionally designed to be in addition to the patient's own lifestyle. There will be no restrictions placed on diet, anti-oxidant supplements or prescription medications, other than those listed in the exclusion criteria below.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Use of anti-bacterial mouthwash or tongue scrapes (current or unwillingness to cease such mouthcare for at least one month prior to entering the study, and for the duration of the trial) as this interrupts the enterosalivary circuit and thus prevents the bioactivity of nitrate
- History of recurrent symptomatic gout or current treatment with xanthine oxidase inhibitors for hyperuricaemia
- Concomitant use of long acting organic nitrates or phosphodiesterase inhibitors (not including on an as required basis)
- Angina at CCS Class III/IV, requiring regular use of sublingual GTN (considered >twice/week), or awaiting revascularisation
- If LVEF in the range 40-50%, impaires systolic function secondary to uncorrected valve disease, primary pulmonary hypertension, active myocarditis, constrictive pericarditis, restrictive cardiomyopathy or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- Renal failure with eGFR<30 at screening
- History of symptomatic renal stone disease
- Current life-threatening condition that might prevent a patient-subject completing the study
- Allergy to SonoVue Echo contrast
- Pregnancy, breast feeding or planned pregnancy
- Anaemia, defined as Haemaglobin <80g/L
- Subjects with any acute infection, or recent systemic antibiotics (oral or intravenous) within 3 months of screening, or significant trauma (burns, fractures)
- The subject has a three-month prior history of regular alcohol consumption exceeding an average weekly intake of > 28 units (or an average daily intake of greater than 3 units) for males, or an average weekly intake of > 21 units (or an average daily intake of greater than 2 units) for females. 1 unit is equivalent to a half-pint (284mL) of beer/lager; 25mL measure of spirits or 125mL of wine
- Mobility thought to be restricted significantly by other illnesses apart from heart failure
- Any other subject whom the Investigator deems unsuitable for the study (e.g. due to other medical reasons, laboratory abnormalities, expected study medication noncompliance, or subject's unwillingness to comply with all study-related study procedures)
Sites / Locations
- Queen Mary University of London
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Placebo Comparator
Nitrate-rich Beetroot Juice
Nitrate-deplete Beetroot Juice
Individuals will receive a once daily dose of dietary nitrate in the form of a beetroot juice concentrate (70mL) containing ~5-6mmol inorganic nitrate (James White Drinks, UK) for 12 +/- 2 weeks. This dose has been chosen due to several reports demonstrating efficacy in patients with cardiovascular disease.
The placebo control is an identical juice from which the nitrate anion has been removed using a standard anion exchange resin. Visually there is no detectable difference between the juices and previous spectral, ion concentration, sugar levels, ascorbate analysis and taste testing has confirmed no differences in colour and constituents. The process to extract nitrate from the juice is the same technique used to remove inorganic nitrate from general drinking water supplies, and has been approved for use by Ethics Committees. The nitrate-free juice is not considered a drug or medicine, and is classified as a foodstuff.