“…Although corticosteroids reduce systemic inflammation, they can induce dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, and obesity, known CVD risk factors, and increase risk of CVDs including HF [139]. Immunosuppressants, such as mycophenolate mofetil, cyclophosphamide, and azathioprine, have shown inconsistent associations with ASCVD risk, without as clearly defined effects on HF [129,[140][141][142][143]. Perhaps the clearest demonstration of the barriers between inflammatory disease-specific efficacy and broader application is with TNF-α antagonists: whereas observational studies of RA patients suggested a benefit of TNF-α antagonists in reducing rates of HF hospitalization [144], this HF-reducing benefit was not replicated when TNF-α antagonists were tested in the general HF population without RA [145,146].…”