Published: October 16, 2025
Heart failure affects more than 6 million Americans, with Kentucky facing particularly high death rates of this complex cardiovascular syndrome. For primary care providers, understanding the full spectrum of heart failure — from at-risk patients to those requiring advanced therapies — is crucial for improving outcomes and quality of life. Chioma O. Obiokoye, M.D., heart failure cardiologist with Norton Heart & Vascular Institute Advanced Heart Failure & Recovery Program, outlines a guide of stages and evidence-based care strategies for primary care providers that present opportunities for intervention that can alter the disease trajectory and improve patient outcomes.
Heart failure represents a clinical syndrome where the heart cannot adequately fill or squeeze, leading to symptoms or putting patients at risk for developing other organ damage. The condition progresses through four distinct stages, creating a one-way street from Stage A through Stage D.
Continue Stage A interventions while monitoring for symptom development.
To prevent or delay progression of heart failure, consider referring patients to the heart failure clinic for further evaluation and management.
For patients with ejection fraction 30% or less who are more than 40 days post-myocardial infarction with greater than one-year life expectancy, consider cardiology referral for primary prevention implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) evaluation.
Statins should be added to prevent symptomatic heart failure and adverse cardiovascular events.
The goal shifts to symptom control, decongestion and quality of life improvement. It is important to refer patient to the heart failure specialists to implement guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) with four pillars:
For patients with ejection fraction below 35% despite optimal medical therapy for three months, consider:
Hyperkalemia should not automatically lead to discontinuation of lifesaving medications like ACE inhibitors or spironolactone. Potassium binders can enable continuation of optimal heart failure therapy while managing electrolyte imbalances.
For African American patients or those unable to tolerate ACE inhibitors or ARBs, the combination of hydralazine and isosorbide dinitrate provides proven mortality benefit.
Patients with normal ejection fraction but heart failure symptoms present diagnostic challenges. Look for:
Management focuses on blood pressure control, decongestion and addressing underlying conditions like atrial fibrillation and sleep apnea.
SGLT2 inhibitors, mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists, angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB)/ or angiotensin receptor/neprilysin inhibitor (sacubitril/valsartan) offer benefit of reducing heart failure hospitalizations. SGLT2 inhibitors also decreases cardiovascular mortality.
In patients with ejection fraction below 40%, avoid:
These medications can worsen heart failure outcomes and should be discontinued or avoided.
A patient requires immediate Heart failure program referral when experiencing:
Advanced options include ventricular assist devices, heart transplantation or palliative care discussions.
Successful heart failure management requires coordination between primary care, cardiology, pharmacy, nutrition and other specialists. Early initiation of heart failure GDMT in the outpatient setting or during hospitalization improves long-term adherence and outcomes.
Primary care providers play a crucial role in identifying at-risk patients, implementing preventive measures and optimizing medical therapy before referring for advanced interventions. By understanding the heart failure continuum and implementing evidence-based strategies at each stage, clinicians can significantly impact both the quantity and quality of life for their patients.
The key message remains clear: Heart failure progression is preventable through early recognition, appropriate medical therapy and coordinated, team-based care. Every stage offers opportunities for intervention that can alter the disease trajectory and improve patient outcomes.