| Literature DB >> 11806789 |
Eva Lonn1.
Abstract
The choice of the appropriate dosage of ACE inhibitor in clinical practice is an important one. The available evidence suggests that in chronic heart failure as well as in chronic coronary artery disease, high doses of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor are more effective than low ones. The current recommended clinical approach is to target ACE inhibitor dosing regimens to be similar to those used in the clinical trials, which demonstrated mortality and morbidity benefits. When titrated appropriately, ACE inhibitors are generally well tolerated and target doses can be achieved and maintained in the majority of patients with atherosclerotic vascular disease, with or without heart failure.Entities:
Year: 2001 PMID: 11806789 PMCID: PMC59639 DOI: 10.1186/cvm-2-4-155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Control Trials Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 1468-6694
Trials exploring ACE inhibitor dosing regimens in heart failure
| Trial | ACE-I regimens (daily doses) | Major findings |
| NETWORK (n = 1532) | Enalapril 2.5 mg bid vs 5 mg bid vs 10 mg bid | No difference in hospitalizations for heart failure; trend |
| Follow-up: 5.5 months | towards fewer deaths with increasing dose | |
| ATLAS (n = 3164) | Lisinopril 2.5-5 mg od vs 32.5-35 mg od | Trends towards reduced total and CV mortality and |
| Follow-up:46 months | significant reduction in mortality and all-cause | |
| hospitalizations for high-dose lisinopril | ||
| CHIPS (n = 298) | Captopril 25 mg bid vs 50 mg bid | Trend towards reduced hospitalizations for heart failure and |
| Follow-up: 2 years | towards reduced fatal and nonfatal cardiac events for | |
| high-dose captopril | ||
| HEDS (n = 248) | Enalapril 20 mg vs 60 mg | No significant differences in survival, clinical and |
| Follow-up: 12 months | hemodynamic variables |
ACE-I = angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor; ATLAS = Assessment of Treatment with Lisinopril and Survival; CHIPS = Captopril in Heat Insufficient Patients Study; HEDS = High Enalapril Dose Study; NETWORK = Network of General Practitioners and Hospital Physicians Involved in the Study of Low versus High Doses of Enalapril in Patients with Heart Failure trial.
Figure 1The effect of ACE inhibitor therapy on myocardial infarction in chronic coronary artery disease. ACE inhibitor dose and duration of therapy in the major large clinical trials of ACE inhibitors in coronary artery disease are shown. Reduction in myocardial infarction risk was obtained with prolonged administration of high doses of ACE inhibitors. AIRE = Acute Infarction Ramipril Efficay study; HOPE = Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation study; SAVE = Survival and Ventricular Enlargement Trial; SOLVD-P = Studies of Left Ventricular Enlargement - Prevention arm; SOLVD-T = Studies of Left Ventricular Enlargement - Treatment arm; TRACE = Trandolapril Cardiac Evaluation study.
Figure 2The effect of ramipril on carotid atherosclerosis in the SECURE trial. There was a dose-dependent benefit with reduction in atherosclerosis progression attained with ramipril whcih was more effective at the higher dose of 10 mg/day than in the lower dose of 2.5 mg/day. P = 0.033 overall ramipril effect. *P = 0.028 for ramipril 10 mg/day versus placebo. Mean maximum IMT = average of maximum intimal-medial thickness across 12 predefined carotid arterial segments.
Effect of ramipril on echocardiographic measurements of left ventricular mass and function in a substudy of HOPE
| Echocardiographic variable | Placebo | Ramipril 2.5 mg/day | Ramipril 10 mg/day |
| Δ LVMI (g/m2) | 3.98 ± 25.23 | 4.15 ± 22.77 | -2.02 ± 27.12* |
| Δ LVEF (%) | -2.02 ± 1.54 | -1.54 ± 8.94 | -0.17 ± 8.62† |
| Δ LVEDV (ml) | 4.16 ± 30.89 | -0.43 ± 33.3 | -5.90 ± 35.17†† |
| Δ LVESV (ml) | 5.31 ± 20.49 | 2.90 ± 17.68 | -1.90 ± 18.71†† |
| New wall motion abnormalities | 31 | 30 | 23 |
*P < 0.05. †P = 0.06. ††P < 0.01. Δ refers to study-end minus baseline measurement. HOPE =Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation study; LVMI = left ventricular mass index; LVEF = left ventricular ejection fraction; LVEDV = left ventricular end-diastolic volume; LVESV = left ventricular end-systolic volume.