| Literature DB >> 24065301 |
Abstract
Heart rate is an important contributor in the pathophysiology of both coronary artery disease (CAD) and heart failure (HF). Ivabradine is an anti-anginal and anti-ischaemic agent, which selectively and specifically inhibits the I f current in the sino-atrial node and provides pure heart rate reduction without altering other cardiac parameters, including conduction, and without directly affecting other haemodynamic parameters. It is approved for the treatment of CAD and HF. This article summarises the pharmacological properties, pharmacokinetics, clinical efficacy and tolerability of ivabradine in the treatment of CAD and HF, and presents evidence demonstrating that the pharmacological and clinical properties and clinical efficacy of ivabradine make it an important therapeutic choice for patients with stable CAD or HF. The positive effect of ivabradine on angina pectoris symptoms and its ability to reduce myocardial ischemia make it an important agent in the management of patients with stable CAD or chronic HF. Further studies are underway to add to the already robust evidence of ivabradine for the prevention of cardiovascular events in patients with CAD but without clinical HF. The SIGNIFY (Study assessInG the morbidity-mortality beNefits of the I f inhibitor ivabradine in patients with coronarY artery disease) trial includes patients with stable CAD and an LVEF above 40 %, with no clinical sign of HF, and is investigating the long-term effects (over a period of 48 months) of ivabradine in a large study population. So far, this study has included more than 19,000 patients from 51 countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24065301 PMCID: PMC3786091 DOI: 10.1007/s40265-013-0117-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs ISSN: 0012-6667 Impact factor: 9.546
Fig. 1Mode of action of ivabradine: by inhibiting ion flow though the f-channel, ivabradine reduces the slow diastolic depolarization phase of the action potential of sino-atrial node cells, thereby reducing heart rate. Reproduced with permission from Canet et al. [11]
Fig. 2Change from baseline in mean heart rate over 24 h after treatment with ivabradine 7.5 mg twice daily in volunteers. bpm beats per minute. Clinical data from the IRIS trial. EudraCT record 2011-001665-40 (data on file)
Summary of the principal results of the main publications of ivabradine in coronary artery disease
| Publication | Study summary |
|---|---|
| CAD: monotherapy | |
| Borer et al., 2003 [ | Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre study in patients with stable CAD and chronic stable angina ( |
| INITIATIVE [ | Randomised, double-blind, active-controlled, parallel-group, multicentre study in patients with CAD and stable angina. Duration: 16 weeks. Efficacy: TED during ETT. Change in TED at trough: +86.8 and +91.7 s with ivabradine 7.5 and 10 mg bid vs +78.8 s with atenolol 50–100 mg/day (mean difference 10.3 and 15.7 s; |
| Ruzyllo et al., 2007 [ | Randomised, double-blind, parallel-group, multicentre study in patients with chronic stable angina. Duration: 3 months. Efficacy: TED during ETT. Change in TED at trough: +27.6 and +21.7 s with ivabradine 7.5 and 10 mg bid vs +31.2 s with amlodipine 10 mg od (mean difference 1.8 and 6.6 s; |
| CAD: combination therapy | |
| ASSOCIATE [ | Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre study in patients with chronic stable angina. Duration: 4 months. Ivabradine 5–7.5 mg bid + atenolol 50 mg od vs placebo + atenolol 50 mg od. Efficacy: TED during ETT. Change in TED at trough: +24.3 s vs +7.7 s ( |
| Amosova et al., 2011 [ | Randomised, parallel-group, single-blind study in patients with MI and moderate left ventricular systolic dysfunction. Duration: 2 months. Ivabradine 5–7.5 mg bid + bisoprolol 5 mg od versus bisoprolol 5–10 mg od. Change in mean resting HR: from 76.6 to 59.3 bpm ( |
| ADDITIONS [ | Multicentre, open-label, observational study in patients with stable angina pectoris. Duration: 4 months. Ivabradine 2.5–7.5 mg bid + β-blocker. Change in resting HR: from 85.0 to 65.6 bpm ( |
| REDUCTION [ | Multicentre, open-label, observational study in patients with stable angina pectoris. Duration: 4 months. Ivabradine 2.5–7.5 mg bid + β-blocker. Change in resting HR: −12.4 bpm ( |
| López-Bescós et al., 2007 [ | Randomised, double-blind, parallel-group, multicentre study in patients with chronic stable angina on concomitant therapy (excluding β-blockers). Duration: 12 months. Ivabradine 5 or 7.5 mg bid. Change in resting HR: −9.7 and −12.3 bpm. Change in the number of angina attacks per week: −1.9 and −1.2. Change in the consumption of nitrates: −1.2 and −1.7 U |
| Skalidis et al., 2011 [ | Prospective study in patients with stable CAD. Duration: 1 week. Ivabradine 5 mg bid plus current medication. HR: from 78 to 65 bpm ( |
| CAD: special populations | |
| Elderly [ | Multicentre, open-label, observational study in elderly patients (>80 years old) with stable angina pectoris. Duration: 4 months. Ivabradine 2.5–7.5 mg bid + β-blocker. Change in resting HR: −12.0 bpm ( |
| Subpopulations [ | Pooled analysis of five randomised, double-blind, parallel-group studies in patients with angina pectoris. Duration: 3–4 months. Ivabradine 5–10 mg bid. Change in resting HR: −14.5 % (11.3 bpm) in all patients; reduction of 12.4–16.3 % in subpopulations (no difference between groups). Change in the number of angina attacks per week: −59.4 % in all patients; reduction of 51 % to 70 % in subpopulations (no difference between groups). Change in the consumption of nitrates: −53.7 % in all patients; reduction of 0.4 to 3.4 U/week in subpopulations |
| Diabetes [ | Pooled analysis of eight multicentre, randomised, double-blind studies in patients with stable angina. Duration: 2 weeks to 1 year. Ivabradine 2.5–20 mg bid. Change in resting HR: −11.3 bpm in patients without diabetes mellitus vs −11.6 bpm in patients with diabetes mellitus. Change in the number of angina attacks per week: −2.2 in patients without diabetes mellitus vs −2.0 in patients with diabetes mellitus |
| CAD: with left ventricular dysfunction (BEAUTIFUL) | |
| Main results [ | Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre study in patients with CAD and LVEF of <40 % also receiving conventional CV therapy. Duration: 19 months (median). Ivabradine 5–7.5 mg bid vs placebo. Efficacy: composite endpoint of CV death, admission to hospital for acute MI and admission to hospital for new-onset or worsening HF. Primary endpoint: 15.4 % vs 15.3 % of patients ( |
| Angina subgroup [ |
|
| ECHO substudy [ | Echocardiographic substudy of BEAUTIFUL. Duration: 3–12 months. Ivabradine 5–7.5 mg bid vs placebo. Efficacy: LVEDVI. Change in LVEDVI: −1.48 vs +1.85 mL/m2 ( |
| Holter substudy [ | Holter substudy of the BEAUTIFUL trial. Duration: 6 months. Ivabradine 5–7.5 mg bid vs placebo. Efficacy: 24-h HR reduction. HR reduction: 6.3 vs 0.4 bpm ( |
bid twice daily, bpm beats per minute, CAD coronary artery disease, CFV coronary flow velocity, CV cardiovascular, ETT exercise tolerance test, HF heart failure, HR heart rate, LVEDVI left ventricular end-diastolic volume index, LVEF left ventricular ejection fraction, MI myocardial infarction, NS not significant, od once daily, RRR relative risk reduction, TAO time to angina onset, TED total exercise duration, TLA time to limiting angina, TST time to 1-mm ST-segment depression
Fig. 3Results of the ASSOCIATE study showing the effects of ivabradine on exercise tolerance testing (ETT) after 4 months of treatment in patients with chronic stable angina who received the β-blocker atenolol. Adapted from Tardif et al. [48]
Fig. 4Effect of ivabradine on risk of hospitalization for myocardial infarction (MI) in patients with coronary artery disease with left ventricular systolic dysfunction and a heart rate ≥70 beats per minute (bpm) in the BEAUTIFUL trial. HR hazard ratio. Adapted from Fox et al. [59]
Summary of the principal results in SHIFT (Systolic Heart failure treatment with the I f inhibitor ivabradine Trial) and its main publicationsa
| Endpoint | Ivabradine 5–7.5 mg bid | Placebo | Hazard ratio |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SHIFT main results: Swedberg et al. [ |
|
| ||
| Primary composite endpointb | 24 % | 29 % | 0.82 | <0.0001 |
| All-cause hospitalization | 38 % | 42 % | 0.89 | 0.003 |
| Hospitalization for worsening heart failure | 16 % | 21 % | 0.74 | <0.0001 |
| Cardiovascular hospitalization | 30 % | 34 % | 0.85 | 0.0002 |
| All-cause death | 16 % | 17 % | 0.90 | 0.092 |
| Cardiovascular death | 14 % | 15 % | 0.91 | 0.13 |
| Heart failure death | 3 % | 5 % | 0.74 | 0.014 |
| Analysis in patients with heart rate ≥75 bpm: Böhm et al. [ |
|
| ||
| Primary composite endpointb | 27 % | 33 % | 0.76 | <0.0001 |
| All-cause hospitalization | 39 % | 44 % | 0.82 | <0.0001 |
| Hospitalization for worsening heart failure | 18 % | 24 % | 0.70 | <0.0001 |
| Cardiovascular hospitalization | 31 % | 37 % | 0.79 | <0.0001 |
| All-cause death | 17 % | 19 % | 0.83 | 0.0109 |
| Cardiovascular death | 15 % | 17 % | 0.83 | 0.0166 |
| Heart failure death | 4 % | 6 % | 0.61 | 0.0006 |
| Post hoc analysis of MRA status ( | ||||
| Primary composite endpoint in patients with MRA ( | 28 % | 33 % | 0.82(0.78–0.95)f | |
| Hospitalization for worsening heart failure | 19 % | 23 % | 0.77(0.67–0.89)f | |
| Cardiovascular death | 16 % | 18 % | 0.88(0.76–0.94)f | |
| Rehospitalization analysis: Borer et al. [ |
|
| ||
| First hospitalization | 16 % | 21 % | 0.75 | <0.001 |
| Second hospitalization | 6 % | 9 % | 0.66 | <0.001 |
| Third hospitalization | 3 % | 4 % | 0.71 | <0.012 |
| Echocardiographic substudy: Tardif et al. [ |
|
| ||
| LVESV index (mL/m2)d | −7.0 | −0.9 | <0.001 | |
| LVESV (mL) | −13.0 | −1.3 | <0.001 | |
| LVEDV index (mL/m2) | −7.9 | −1.8 | 0.002 | |
| LVEDV (mL) | −14.7 | −2.9 | 0.001 | |
| LVEF (%) | 2.4 % | −0.1 % | <0.001 | |
| Health-related quality-of-life analysis: Ekman et al. [ |
|
| ||
| Heart rate (bpm) | −14.8 | −4.9 | <0.0001 | |
| KCCQ | ||||
| Overall summary score | 6.7 | 4.3 | <0.001 | |
| Clinical summary score | 5.0 | 3.3 | 0.018 | |
bid twice daily, bpm beats per minute, KCCQ Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire, LVEDV left ventricular end-diastolic volume, LVEF left ventricular ejection fraction, LVESV left ventricular end-systolic volume, MRA mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist
aValues are expressed as percentages or means
bCardiovascular death or hospitalization for worsening heart failure
cChange from baseline to 8 months
dPrimary endpoint of substudy
eChange from baseline to 12 months
f95 % confidence intervals are shown in brackets
Fig. 5Results of the SHIFT study in patients with chronic heart failure (HF), showing the effects of ivabradine on the cumulative event curves for (a) the primary composite endpoint of cardiovascular (CV) death or hospital admission for worsening HF, (b) hospital admission for worsening HF, and (c) death from HF. HR hazard ratio. Adapted from Swedberg et al. [65]
Fig. 6Effects of ivabradine on cardiovascular outcomes in patients with chronic heart failure (HF) and a baseline heart rate ≥75 beats per minute: subanalysis of the SHIFT study. The primary composite endpoint of this study was cardiovascular death or hospital admission for worsening HF. CI confidence interval, HR hazard ratio. Adapted from Böhm et al. [66]
Fig. 7Cumulative incidence of hospitalization for worsening heart failure (mean number of events per patient) in the SHIFT study. CI confidence interval, IRR incidence rate ratio. *Estimate of rate of hospitalization over time (corrected for the competing risk of death). Adapted from Borer et al. [69]