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ATLAS Clinical Trial Commentary Dr Eric Topol Chairman and Professor, Department of Cardiology Director of the Joseph J Jacobs Center for Thrombosis and.

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Presentation on theme: "ATLAS Clinical Trial Commentary Dr Eric Topol Chairman and Professor, Department of Cardiology Director of the Joseph J Jacobs Center for Thrombosis and."— Presentation transcript:

1 ATLAS Clinical Trial Commentary Dr Eric Topol Chairman and Professor, Department of Cardiology Director of the Joseph J Jacobs Center for Thrombosis and Vascular Biology at the Cleveland Clinic Dr Robert Califf Professor of Cardiology Associate Vice Chancellor for Clinical Research at Duke University

2 Dosage of enalapril for congestive heart failure in the USA 30-40 15-20 7.5-10 <5<5 ? Mean daily dose in CONSENSUS I18.4 mg V-HeFT II15.0 mg SOLVD16.6 mg Daily dose in mg FDA March 1992

3 ATLAS Objective To compare the effects of low doses and high doses of ACE inhibitors on the risk of death and the risk of major events in chronic heart failure  low-dose lisinopril (2.5 – 5.0 mg daily)  high-dose lisinopril (32.5 – 35.0 mg daily)

4 ATLAS Patient population (n=3164) Inclusion criteria class II, III and IV heart failure if class II, hospitalization for CHF within 6 months LV ejection fraction < 30% receiving digitalis & diuretics ± ACE inhibitor Exclusion criteria recent MI, unstable angina or revascularization history of sustained VT IV positive inotropic drugs within 48 hours

5 Study design 02463.0 - 4.5 Years Weeks 2.5- 5 mg 12.5- 15 mg 22.5- 25 mg 32.5 - 35 mg 2.5 - 5 mg 12.5- 15 mg Randomize 3178 pts (88%) on ACE-i 405 pts (12%) ACE-i naive

6 ATLAS Time to death from any cause for patients in each treatment group Treatment group Low dose lisinopril High dose lisinopril

7 ATLAS Death or hospitalization for any reason Odds Low doseHigh doseratiop Value Morbidity+ 1338/15961250/15680.88p=0.002 mortality (83.8%)(79.7%)(0.82-0.96)

8 ATLAS Adverse reactions Low doseHigh dose Dizziness12%19% Hypotension7%11% Worsening renal function7%10% Cough13%11% Hyperkalemia4%6% Hypokalemia3%1%

9 Results of ATLAS 8% reduction in risk of death 15% reduction in all-cause mortality + hospitalizations for heart failure Results of SOLVD treatment trial 16% reduction in risk of death 26% reduction in all-cause mortality + hospitalizations for heart failure ATLAS Adverse reactions

10 Conclusion When compared with low doses, the use of high doses of lisinopril (up to 35 mg/day) is associated with a  12% reduction in the risk of death and hospitalization for any cause  24% reduction in the frequency of hospitalizations for heart failure In the US, use of high doses instead of low doses would:  prevent 100,000 patients from being hospitalized or dying each year  prevent nearly 250,000 hospitalizations for CHF

11 Outcome-based dose comparison For most drugs, dose ranging is based on surrogate measures. Occasionally, a single outcome-based trial is performed, usually at a single dose. Multi-dose trials are often constructed with a strategy that doesn’t take both doses to completion.

12 Ideal therapy for congestive heart failure Beta-blocker ACE inhibitor Digoxin Spironolactone ?

13 RALES Patient population (n=1663) Trial design randomized double-blind study 25 mg spironolactone QD vs placebo Primary endpoint death from all causes Inclusion criteria class II and III heart failure diagnosis of heart failure > 6 weeks on ACE inhibitor if tolerated EF < 35% for at least 6 months Exclusion criteria life threatening comorbidity operable, valvular or congenital heart disease unstable angina Pitt B, et al. New Engl J Med 1999;341:709-717

14 RALES Results Relative Placebo Spironolactoneriskp Value (n=841)(n=822) Mortality, 386 2840.70p<0.001 deaths (%) (46%)(35%)(0.60-0.82) Early discontinuation after mean follow-up of 24 months Hospitalization 300/663260/5150.65p<0.001 for heart failure* (0.54-0.77) * no. of patients/no. of events Pitt B, et al. New Engl J Med 1999;341:709-717

15 Drop-out rates 18% low dose 17% high dose worsening heart failure, common reason for drop-out Lisinopril titration strategy ACE naïve patients - 2.5 – 5 mg of lisinopril to start - build up to 12.5 – 15 mg for admission to trial - increased doses over months ATLAS Adverse reactions

16 Cost-effectiveness incremental cost of additional hospitalizations in low dose group outweighs incremental cost of high dose Hospitalizations for any reason Low dose – 4 397High dose – 3 819 ATLAS Adverse reaction s

17 - dose limiting ACE inhibitors because of cough, when this symptom is due to heart failure or infection - withholding ACE inhibitors for a low blood pressure auscultated by Korotkoff sound in the absence of postural symptoms Clinical pitfalls in the management of heart failure Adverse reactions


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