Literature DB >> 15337700

Effect of baseline or changes in adrenergic activity on clinical outcomes in the beta-blocker evaluation of survival trial.

M R Bristow1, H Krause-Steinrauf, R Nuzzo, Cheng-Seng Liang, J Lindenfeld, B D Lowes, B Hattler, W T Abraham, L Olson, S Krueger, S Thaneemit-Chen, J M Hare, H S Loeb, M J Domanski, E J Eichhorn, R Zelis, P Lavori.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Adrenergic activation is thought to be an important determinant of outcome in subjects with chronic heart failure (CHF), but baseline or serial changes in adrenergic activity have not been previously investigated in a large patient sample treated with a powerful antiadrenergic agent. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Systemic venous norepinephrine was measured at baseline, 3 months, and 12 months in the beta-Blocker Evaluation of Survival Trial (BEST), which compared placebo treatment with the beta-blocker/sympatholytic agent bucindolol. Baseline norepinephrine level was associated with a progressive increase in rates of death or death plus CHF hospitalization that was independent of treatment group. On multivariate analysis, baseline norepinephrine was also a highly significant (P<0.001) independent predictor of death. In contrast, the relation of the change in norepinephrine at 3 months to subsequent clinical outcomes was complex and treatment group-dependent. In the placebo-treated group but not in the bucindolol-treated group, marked norepinephrine increase at 3 months was associated with increased subsequent risks of death or death plus CHF hospitalization. In the bucindolol-treated group but not in the placebo-treated group, the 1st quartile of marked norepinephrine reduction was associated with an increased mortality risk. A likelihood-based method indicated that 18% of the bucindolol group but only 1% of the placebo group were at an increased risk for death related to marked reduction in norepinephrine at 3 months.
CONCLUSIONS: In BEST, a subset of patients treated with bucindolol had an increased risk of death as the result of sympatholysis, which compromised the efficacy of this third-generation beta-blocker.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15337700     DOI: 10.1161/01.CIR.0000141297.50027.A4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  32 in total

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Review 2.  Ethnic differences in cardiovascular drug response: potential contribution of pharmacogenetics.

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Review 3.  Progress toward genetic tailoring of heart failure therapy.

Authors:  John H Lillvis; David E Lanfear
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4.  Reduction of sympathetic activity via adrenal-targeted GRK2 gene deletion attenuates heart failure progression and improves cardiac function after myocardial infarction.

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5.  Alpha1-adrenergic receptors prevent a maladaptive cardiac response to pressure overload.

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6.  Effect of bucindolol on heart failure outcomes and heart rate response in patients with reduced ejection fraction heart failure and atrial fibrillation.

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9.  Changes in Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction Predict Survival and Hospitalization in Heart Failure With Reduced Ejection Fraction.

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10.  Assist devices fail to reverse patterns of fetal gene expression despite beta-blockers.

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