Logo

American Heart Association

  11
  0


Final ID: MDP1370

Real-world Long-term Effectiveness of Mavacamten in Patients with Symptomatic Obstructive Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: a Multicenter Observational Study (MARVEL-HCM)

Abstract Body (Do not enter title and authors here): Background
Mavacamten was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in April 2022 for the treatment of adults with New York Heart Association (NYHA) class II-III symptomatic obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Few studies have reported on the long-term real-world effectiveness and safety of mavacamten. We evaluated clinical outcomes in patients on mavacamten in multiple health centers across the United States.

Research Questions
This study assessed the real-world effectiveness and safety of mavacamten in patients with symptomatic obstructive HCM.

Methods
In this multi-center observational study, we evaluated patient characteristics at baseline, NYHA class, left ventricular outflow tract gradients (LVOTg) at rest and Valsalva, and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) in patients with symptomatic obstructive HCM treated with mavacamten for up to 72 weeks.

Results
Mavacamten was initiated in 172 patients across 4 US centers (UCSF, Mayo Arizona, Stanford, and Atlantic Health System/Morristown Medical Center). Baseline characteristics included: 56% female, mean age 64 (standard deviation ±13) years, 47% NYHA class III, mean resting LVOTg of 47 mmHg and mean Valsalva LVOTg of 89 mmHg, and 23% non-White. Comorbidities included hypertension (56%) and atrial fibrillation (25%) at baseline (Table). Patients experienced a notable early response to mavacamten in resting and Valsalva gradients by week 4, which was sustained through week 72 (Figure A). No patients were NYHA class III at week 72, compared to 47% at baseline (Figure B). Mean LVEF did not change substantially between baseline and week 72. No patients experienced an LVEF of <40% and 2% experienced an LVEF of <50%.

Conclusions
This is the largest observational study to date demonstrating the effectiveness and safety of mavacamten with substantial sustained reductions in resting and Valsalva LVOTg, and progressive improvements in NYHA class without considerable changes in mean LVEF up to 72 weeks.
  • Abraham, Theodore  ( University of California San Francisco , San Francisco , California , United States )
  • Kim, Mi-ok  ( University of California San Francisco , San Francisco , California , United States )
  • Schuler, Patricia  ( Bristol Myers Squibb , Princeton , New Jersey , United States )
  • Dubey, Anand  ( Bristol Myers Squibb , Princeton , New Jersey , United States )
  • Alsidawi, Said  ( Mayo Clinic Arizona , Phoenix , Arizona , United States )
  • Martinez, Matthew  ( Atlantic Health System/Morristown Medical Center , Morristown , New Jersey , United States )
  • Wheeler, Matthew  ( Stanford University School of Medicine , Stanford , California , United States )
  • Roehl, Kaitlin  ( Mayo Clinic Arizona , Phoenix , Arizona , United States )
  • Patel, Ruchi  ( Stanford University School of Medicine , Stanford , California , United States )
  • Soutar, Marybeth  ( Atlantic Health System/Morristown Medical Center , Morristown , New Jersey , United States )
  • Herry, Morgane  ( University of California San Francisco , San Francisco , California , United States )
  • Wang, Annie  ( University of California San Francisco , San Francisco , California , United States )
  • Author Disclosures:
    Theodore Abraham: DO have relevant financial relationships ; Research Funding (PI or named investigator):BMS:Active (exists now) ; Research Funding (PI or named investigator):Tenaya :Active (exists now) ; Research Funding (PI or named investigator):Cytokinetics:Active (exists now) | Mi-Ok Kim: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Patricia Schuler: DO have relevant financial relationships ; Employee:Bristol Myers Squibb:Active (exists now) | Anand Dubey: DO have relevant financial relationships ; Employee:BMS:Active (exists now) ; Individual Stocks/Stock Options:BMS:Active (exists now) | Said Alsidawi: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Matthew Martinez: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Matthew Wheeler: DO have relevant financial relationships ; Research Funding (PI or named investigator):BMS:Active (exists now) ; Research Funding (PI or named investigator):Astra Zeneca:Active (exists now) ; Consultant:Leal Tx:Past (completed) ; Research Funding (PI or named investigator):Salubris Bio:Active (exists now) ; Research Funding (PI or named investigator):Cytokinetics:Active (exists now) | Kaitlin Roehl: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Ruchi Patel: No Answer | Marybeth Soutar: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Morgane Herry: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Annie Wang: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships
Meeting Info:

Scientific Sessions 2024

2024

Chicago, Illinois

Session Info:

Hypertrophy and Heart Failure

Monday, 11/18/2024 , 11:10AM - 12:35PM

Moderated Digital Poster Session

More abstracts on this topic:
Cardiac Myosin Inhibitors Improve Hemodynamics and Symptom Burden in Symptomatic Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: An Updated Meta-Analysis

Raheel Mahad, Franco Veronica, Hasan Ayesha, Vallakati Ajay, Goyal Akash, Smith Sakima, Patel Vaiibhav, Kahwash Rami, Lampert Brent, Bole Indra, Foreman Beth, Haas Garrie

Bridge from Arrest to Recovery: Sudden Cardiac Arrest in a Young Patient with Concomitant Myocardial Bridge and Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Iqbal Fatima, Khan Muhammad Jafar, Charitakis Konstantinos

You have to be authorized to contact abstract author. Please, Login
Not Available