This year, we once again sponsored a hugely successful Circulation Symposium at #AHA22. Over the course of two hours, we hosted five-minute presentations of some of the very best science we published this past year. And it was truly a tour de force of novel, important, and even practice-changing content!
Mirroring the format of the journal, we first enjoyed presentations of our short Frame of Reference pieces (On My Mind, Perspective). Josephine Harrington, M.D., a fellow from Duke, presented a compelling case for prioritizing “quad therapy” in heart failure. Paul Armstrong, M.D., from the University of Alberta, presented three Global Rounds papers, discussing Brazil, France, and Pakistan. One presentation reviewed secular trends in e-cigarette use. A clinical trial from Europe evaluated aortic valve replacement versus conservative medical therapy in asymptomatic severe aortic stenosis. Three talks discussed papers on the “hot topic” of SGLT2i therapy, examining: a) serum K+ levels (finding that SGLT2i decreased the likelihood of developing hyperkalemia without provoking hypokalemia, b) accelerated decongestion in patients presenting with acute decompensated heart failure when administered early on hospital presentation, and c) whether benefits of both SGLT2i and efpeglenatide are preserved when administered concurrently (they are).