HFA Congress 2026 — Dr Ambarish Pandey (University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Texas, US) joins us to discuss findings on diuretic resistance drawn from TRANSFORM-HF, a large-scale, pragmatic, randomised clinical effectiveness trial comparing torsemide versus furosemide in patients hospitalised with heart failure.
TRANSFORM-HF enrolled 2,973 patients across 60 US sites, randomising 1:1 to oral torsemide or furosemide prior to hospital discharge, with follow-up extending to 30 months. This analysis focuses on diuretic resistance within the trial cohort — examining its prevalence, clinical correlates, and impact on outcomes including all-cause mortality, hospitalisation, and quality of life across the two loop diuretic strategies.
Interview Questions:
- How is diuretic resistance defined and identified in clinical practice, and why is it a particularly important problem to address in hospitalised heart failure patients?
- What made the TRANSFORM-HF dataset well suited to examining diuretic resistance, and how was it characterised within this analysis?
- What were your key findings regarding the prevalence and clinical profile of patients with diuretic resistance in the trial cohort?
- How did diuretic resistance influence outcomes — including mortality, rehospitalisation, and quality of life — across the torsemide and furosemide arms?
- Did torsemide demonstrate any advantage over furosemide specifically in patients with evidence of diuretic resistance?
- What do these findings tell us about how loop diuretic choice should be informed by a patient's diuretic response profile?
- What are the outstanding questions around managing diuretic resistance in heart failure, and what approaches show the most promise for future investigation?
Recorded on-site at Heart Failure Association Congress 2026, Barcelona.
Editors: Jordan Rance
Videographer: David Ben-Harosh, Oliver Miles
Support: This is an independent interview produced by Radcliffe Cardiology.
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