ACC Congress 2026 Late-Breaking Science Collection

  • Published:  28 March 2026
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ACC Congress 2026 Late-Breaking Science Collection

  • Published:  28 March 2026
  • Views: 

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    3577

  • Likes: 

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    1

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About the episode

American College of Cardiology Congress 2026 – Dr Pam Taub (University of California San Diego, La Jolla, US) joins us to discuss results from the RECOVER-Autonomic platform trial (NCT06305806; Kanecia Obie Zimmerman), evaluating the impact of ivabradine on orthostatic intolerance, quality of life, and heart rate in post-COVID POTS.

This randomised, placebo-controlled appendix trial enrolled 181 participants with confirmed prior SARS-CoV-2 infection and persistent autonomic dysfunction symptoms lasting at least 12 weeks. Participants were randomised to ivabradine or placebo over a 12-week treatment period, with an additional 3-month follow up. Alongside pharmacologic therapy, a coordinated non-pharmacologic care package, including dietary mediated volume expansion, exercise rehabilitation and patient education, was implemented. The platform design also allowed simultaneous assessment of IVIG in a parallel appendix, reflecting the hypothesis that immune-mediated mechanisms underlie autonomic dysfunction in post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Findings showed that treatment with ivabradine alone did not significantly improve patient-reported orthostatic intolerance in patients with long COVID POTS. Researchers observed a significant reduction in heart rate change (supine to standing) compared to placebo.

Interview Questions:

  1. How has our understanding of the underlying mechanisms of POST-COVID POTS evolved, and why was ivabradine selected as a priority intervention?
  2. Can you walk us through the RECOVER-Autonomic platform design and what distinguished the ivabradine appendix in terms of patient selection and trial structure?
  3. What were the key findings?
  4. The trial also tested coordinated non-pharmacologic care alongside ivabradine — what role did this play, and does combining pharmacologic and lifestyle-based strategies offer additive benefit?
  5. What are your key take-home messages for clinicians managing patients with long-COVID cardiovascular symptoms, and what research priorities should the field pursue next?


Recorded on-site at ACC 2026, New Orleans.

For more expert insights and late-breaking science from ACC 2026, visit the Late-breaking Science Video Collection.


Editor: Jordan Rance
Videographer: Dan Brent, David Ben-Harosh


Support: This is an independent interview produced by Radcliffe Cardiology.

Overview

Keep up-to-date with our video collection from the American College of Cardiology's 75th Annual Scientific Session, bringing you the latest from late-breaking science, featured research, and clinical horizon sessions.

Catch our congress preview and wrap-up in the NVM Cardiology Meeting Reflections series, alongside concise Expert Interviews with leading faculty distilling the key take-home messages for clinical practice — plus in-depth Highlights breaking down the most impactful trials of the meeting.

More from this programme

Part 2

Between the Sessions with Dr Purvi Parwani

Part 6

NVM Cardiology Meeting Reflections

Faculty Biographies

Pam Taub

Pam Taub

Professor of Medicine

Prof Pam Taub is Professor of Medicine at the UC San Diego School of Medicine in the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, San Diego, US. She is the Founding Director of the Step Family Foundation Cardiac Rehabilitation and Wellness Center.

Her clinical practice focuses on preventive cardiology and lipidology, as well as women's cardiovascular health. She has extensive clinical trial experience and is active in clinical and translational research. Her research focuses on assessing the impact of behavioural, technological, and pharmacological interventions on cardiometabolic disease. 

View full profile

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