| Literature DB >> 29632676 |
Juan Carlos Kaski1, Steffen Gloekler2,3, Roberto Ferrari4,5, Kim Fox6, Bernard I Lévy7, Michel Komajda8, Panos Vardas9, Paolo G Camici10.
Abstract
In chronic stable angina, elevated heart rate contributes to the development of symptoms and signs of myocardial ischaemia by increasing myocardial oxygen demand and reducing diastolic perfusion time. Accordingly, heart rate reduction is a well-known strategy for improving both symptoms of myocardial ischaemia and quality of life (QOL). The heart rate-reducing agent ivabradine, a direct and selective inhibitor of the If current, decreases myocardial oxygen consumption while increasing diastolic time, without affecting myocardial contractility or coronary vasomotor tone. Ivabradine is indicated for treatment of stable angina and chronic heart failure (HF). This review examines available evidence regarding the efficacy and safety of ivabradine in stable angina, when used as monotherapy or in combination with beta-blockers, in particular angina subgroups and in patients with stable angina with left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD) or HF. Trials involving more than 45 000 patients receiving treatment with ivabradine have shown that this agent has antianginal and anti-ischaemic effects, regardless of age, sex, severity of angina, revascularisation status or comorbidities. This heart rate-lowering agent might also improve prognosis, reduce hospitalisation rates and improve QOL in angina patients with chronic HF and LVSD.Entities:
Keywords: angina; antianginal drug; comorbidities; ivabradine
Year: 2018 PMID: 29632676 PMCID: PMC5888443 DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2017-000725
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Heart ISSN: 2053-3624
Figure 1Change from baseline in mean heart rate over 24 hours after treatment with ivabradine 7.5 mg twice daily in volunteers. Clinical data from the Institut de Recherches Internationales Servier (IRIS) database. EudraCT record 2011-001665-40 (data on file). bid, twice a day; bpm, beats per minute. Copied from reference: Deedwania 2013.12
Figure 2Cardioprotective effects of ivabradine administration in the setting of acute coronary syndromes and myocardial infarction. HR, heart rate; hsCRP, high sensitivity C reactive protein; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; MI, myocardial infarction; NO, nitric oxide; ROS, reactive oxygen species; VF, ventricular fibrillation; VT, ventricular tachycardia. Copied from reference: Niccoli et al.19
Summary of the clinical data on ivabradine in patients with stable angina with or without left ventricular systolic dysfunction or heart failure
| Effects of ivabradine on symptoms/myocardial ischaemia in patients with stable angina | |
| Publication | Study summary |
| Stable angina – monotherapy | |
| Borer | Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre study in patients with chronic SA (n=360). Duration: 2 wks double-blind+2–3 months open-label. Efficacy: TST and TLA. At 2 wks, TST increased by 32.0 and 44.1 s with ivabradine 2.5 mg and 5 mg twice daily versus 9.0 s with placebo (P=0.016 for 5 mg twice daily dose vs placebo). TLA increased by 22.5 s and 27.2 s with ivabradine 2.5 and 5 mg twice daily versus 12.7 s with placebo. Resting HR and exercise HR decreased significantly with ivabradine 2.5 mg and 5 mg twice daily (both P<0.05 vs placebo). |
| INITIATIVE, 2005 | Randomised, double-blind, parallel-group, multicentre study in patients with SA. Duration: 16 wks. Efficacy: TED during ETT. Change in TED at trough: +86.8 s with ivabradine 7.5 mg twice daily versus +78.8 s with atenolol 50–100 mg/day (mean difference 10.3 s; P<0.001 for non-inferiority). Change in the number of angina attacks/wk at 16 wks: −2.2 for ivabradine 7.5 mg twice daily versus −2.7 mg for atenolol. Change in resting HR: −14.3 bpm for ivabradine 7.5 mg twice daily versus −15.6 bpm for atenolol. |
| Ruzyllo | Randomised, double-blind, parallel-group, multicentre study in patients with chronic SA. Duration: 3 months. Efficacy: TED during ETT. Change in TED at trough: +27.6 s with ivabradine 7.5 mg twice daily versus +31.2 s with amlodipine 10 mg od (mean difference 1.8 s; P<0.001 for non-inferiority). Change in the number of angina attacks/wk: −3.0 for ivabradine 7.5 mg twice daily versus −3.0 for amlodipine. |
| Skalidis | Prospective, open single-centre study in patients with stable CAD of one or two vessels, who were eligible for PCI. Duration: 1 wk. Efficacy: ivabradine 5 mg twice daily improved hyperaemic coronary flow velocity and reserve in patients with stable CAD. Resting-APV (17.0±5.5 vs 19.7±7.6, P=0.003) and augmentation of hyperaemia-APV (57.9±17.8 vs 53.5±21.4, P=0.009) led to improvement in CFR (3.51±0.81 vs 2.78±0.61, P<0.001). |
| Tagliamonte | Prospective, randomised, double-blind trial in patients with stable CAD. Duration: 1 month. Efficacy: coronary flow velocity reserve increased significantly with ivabradine 2.5–7.5 mg twice daily (3.52±0.64 vs 2.67±0.55, P<0.001) and bisoprolol 2.5–10 mg od (3.35±0.70 vs 2.72±0.55, P<0.001), but it was significantly greater with ivabradine. HR decreased similarly (63±7 vs 61±6 bpm; P=NS). |
| Gloekler | Prospective, randomised, placebo-controlled, monocentre, proof-of-concept trial in 46 patients with chronic stable CAD, 23 of whom received placebo and 23 ivabradine for 6 months. HR changed by +0.2 bpm with placebo and −8.1 bpm with ivabradine (P=0.0089). With placebo, collateral flow index decreased from 0.140 at baseline to 0.109 at follow-up (P=0.12), while it increased from 0.107 to 0.152 with ivabradine (P=0.0461). |
| Maranta | An open-label, proof-of-concept study in 15 patients with exercise-inducible ischaemia. Stress echocardiography was done at baseline after washout and repeated after 2 wks of ivabradine 7.5 mg twice daily at the same workload. Ivabradine reduced both acute LV dysfunction and stunning in CAD patients with exercise-induced ischaemia. |
| REDUCTION 2009 | Multicentre, open-label, observational study in patients with SA pectoris. Duration: 4 months. Ivabradine 2.5–7.5 mg twice daily+BB. Change in resting HR: −12.4 bpm (P<0.0001 vs baseline). Change in the number of angina attacks/wk: from 2.8 to 0.5 (P<0.0001 vs baseline). Change in the consumption of nitrates: from 3.7 to 0.7 U (P<0.0001 vs baseline). |
| Stable angina – in combination | |
| ASSOCIATE, 2009 | Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre study in patients with chronic SA. Duration: 4 months. Ivabradine 5–7.5 mg twice daily+atenolol 50 mg od versus placebo+atenolol 50 mg od. Efficacy: TED during ETT. Change in TED at trough: +24.3 s versus +7.7 s (P<0.001). Change in TLA: +26.0 s versus +9.4 s (P<0.001). Change in TAO:+49.1 s versus +22.7 s (P<0.001). Change in TST: +45.7 s versus +15.4 s (P<0.001). |
| ADDITIONS 2012 | Multicentre, open-label, observational study in patients with SA. Duration: 4 months. Ivabradine 2.5–7.5 mg twice daily+BB. Change in resting HR: from 85.0 bpm to 65.6 bpm (P<0.0001 vs baseline). Change in the number of angina attacks/wk: −1.4 (P<0.0001 vs baseline). Change in the consumption of nitrates: −1.9 U (P<0.0001 vs baseline). |
| López-Bescós | Randomised, double-blind, parallel-group, multicentre study in patients with chronic SA on concomitant therapy (excluding BBs). Duration: 12 months. Ivabradine 5 mg or 7.5 mg twice daily. Change in resting HR: −9.7 and −12.3 bpm. Change in the number of angina attacks/wk: −1.9 and −1.2. Change in the consumption of nitrates: −1.2 U and −1.7 U. |
| Pooled analysis by Werdan | Pooled data from three observational clinical studies in 8555 patients with SA received 2.5 mg, 5 mg or 7.5 mg twice daily of ivabradine for 4 months. Therapy with ivabradine was associated with a significant reduction in the frequency of angina attacks and consumption of short-acting nitrates of 87%. Ivabradine is effective and safe in all subpopulations of angina patients seen in clinical practice, independent of age, comorbidities and use of BBs. |
| Panhellenic study, 2015 | Observational, prospective, open-label study in 2403 patients with chronic SA receiving ivabradine 5–7.5 mg twice daily for 4 months in combination with BBs. Ivabradine reduced resting HR from 81.5±9.7 bpm to 63.9±6.0 bpm (P<−0.001), mean number of anginal attacks decreased from 2.0±2.0 times/wk to 0.2±0.6 times/wk (P<0.001) and nitroglycerin consumption decreased from 1.4±2.0 times/wk to 0.1±0.4 times/wk (P<0.001). The percentage of patients with CCS angina class I increased from approximately 38% (baseline) to 84% (study completion; P<0.001). The mean EQ-5D visual analogue scale index increased by 16.1 points (P<0.001), and compliance with treatment was high throughout the trial (96%). |
| Stable angina – special populations | |
| Elderly – REDUCTION, 2011 | Multicentre, open-label, observational study in elderly patients (≥80 years old) with SA. Duration: 4 months. Ivabradine 2.5–7.5 mg twice daily+BBs. Change in resting HR: −12.0 bpm (P<0.0001 vs baseline). Change in the number of angina attacks/wk: from 3.0 to 0.8 (P<0.0001 vs baseline). Change in the consumption of short-acting nitrates: from 4.2 U to 1.2 U (P<0.0001 vs baseline). |
| Elderly – ADDITIONS, 2014 | Retrospective analysis of observational, multicentre, prospective, open-label ADDITIONS study investigating ivabradine twice daily+BB in SA patients ≥75 years. Duration: 4 months. Efficacy: HR fell by 19.2±11.6 bpm to 65.4±8.3 bpm. Frequency of angina attacks diminished by 1.6±1.8/wk to 0.4±1.3/wk and consumption of short-acting nitrates fell by 2.2±3.2 units/wk to 0.6±1.8 units/wk (both P<0.0001). Severity of angina, according to CCS grade, decreased and QOL improved (P<0.0001). |
| Pooled analysis from RCTs, 2009 | Pooled analysis of five randomised, double-blind, parallel-group studies in patients with SA. Duration: 3–4 months. Ivabradine ≥5 mg twice daily. 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/wk: −59.4% in all patients; reduction of 51%–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/wk in subpopulations. |
| Diabetes, 2010 | Pooled analysis of eight multicentre, randomised, double-blind studies in patients with SA. Duration: 2 wks–1 year. Change in resting HR: −11.3 bpm in patients without diabetes mellitus versus −11.6 bpm in patients with diabetes mellitus. Change in the number of angina attacks/wk: −2.2 in patients without diabetes mellitus versus −2.0 in patients with diabetes mellitus. |
| Postrevascularisation – post hoc analysis from ADDITIONS, 2015 | Observational, multicentre prospective study in patients with SA on BBs treated with ivabradine at standard doses. Duration: 4 months. In post-PCI patients, ivabradine decreased HR from 83.1 to 64.4 bpm (P<0.0001). Number of angina attacks decreased from 1.9/wk to 0.5/wk. Frequency of nitroglycerin fell from 2.7 times/wk to 1.0 times/wk. |
| Postrevascularisation – post hoc analysis of the Panhellenic study, 2017 | Post hoc analysis of postrevascularisation patients in a prospective, observational study of 2403 patients with SA with CAD taking optimised BB therapy. Duration: 4 months. Treatment with ivabradine reduced angina attacks from 2.2/wk to 0.3/wk (P<0.001) and nitroglycerin consumption from 1.5 times/wk to 0.1 times/wk (P<0.001). QOL improved versus baseline (P<0.001). |
| Postrevascularisation – RIVENDEL study, 2017 | Prospective, randomised controlled, open-label study examining the addition of ivabradine (up to 7.5 mg twice daily) to standard medical therapy in CAD patients >30 days after PCI. Duration: 8 wks. Addition of ivabradine to standard therapy reduced HR from 68.0 bpm to 62.2 bpm (P<0.001), improved flow-mediated dilation from 8.7 to 15.0 (P<0.001) and enhanced nitroglycerin-mediated dilation from 12.7 to 17.7 (P<0.001). |
| Effects of ivabradine on outcomes in patients with stable CAD | |
| SIGNIFY, 2014 | Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of ivabradine, added to standard therapy, in patients with stable CAD without clinical HF and HR ≥70 bpm. Ivabradine up to 10 mg twice daily versus placebo. Duration: 27.8 months (median). Efficacy: no difference in the incidence of the primary endpoint (a composite of death from CV causes or non-fatal MI) between the ivabradine and placebo groups (6.8% and 6.4%, respectively; HR: 1.08; 95% CI 0.96 to 1.20; P=0.20). |
| Effects of ivabradine in patients with LVSD with and without HF | |
| Amosova | Randomised, parallel-group, single-blind study in patients with SA and moderate LVSD. Duration: 2 months. Ivabradine 5–7.5 mg twice daily+bisoprolol 5 mg od versus bisoprolol 5–10 mg od. Change in mean resting HR: from 76.6 bpm to 59.3 bpm (P<0.001 vs baseline) versus from 75.9 bpm to 60.5 bpm (P=0.002 vs baseline). Change in 6 min walking test distance: from 388 m to 446 m (P<0.001 vs baseline) versus from 386 m to 400 m (P=NS). Angina attacks were reduced from 3.3±1.1 to 1.7±0.6 in the ivabradine group and from 3.2±1.0 to 2.5±0.9 in the bisoprolol-alone group (intergroup P=0.041). |
| Angina subgroup analysis from BEAUTIFUL, 2009 | Post hoc analysis in patients with SA and LVEF <40% from a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre study. Duration: 19 months (median). Ivabradine 5–7.5 mg twice daily versus 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: 24% RRR (P=0.05). Hospitalisation for MI: 42% RRR (P=0.021). In patients with HR ≥70 bpm: hospitalisation for MI: 73% RRR (P=0.002); coronary revascularisation: 59% RRR. |
| Angina subgroup analysis from SHIFT, 2017 | Post hoc analysis in patients with SA and chronic HF (LVEF ≤35%) from a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre study in adults in sinus rhythm with stable. Duration: 22.9 months (median). Ivabradine up to 7.5 mg twice daily versus placebo. Efficacy: composite endpoint of CV death or non-fatal MI reduced by 8% versus placebo (P=NS) compared with 11% and 11% in patients without angina and in the overall population, respectively. |
Modified from reference: Deedwania.12
ADDITIONS, prActical Daily efficacy and safety of procoralan In combinaTION with beta blockerS; APV, time-averaged peak flow velocity; ASSOCIATE, evaluation of the Antianginal efficacy and Safety of the aSsociation Of the I f Current Inhibitor ivAbradine with a beTa-blockEr; BB, beta-blocker; bid, twice daily; bpm, beats per minute; BEAUTIFUL, morBidity-mortality EvAlUaTion of the If inhibitor ivabradine in patients with coronary disease and left-ventricULar dysfunction; CAD, coronary artery disease; CCS, Canadian Cardiovascular Society; CFR, coronary flow reserve; CV, cardiovascular; EQ-5D, EuroQol five dimensions questionnaire; ETT, exercise tolerance test; HF, heart failure; HR, heart rate;INITIATIVE; INternatIonal TrIal of the AnTi-anginal effects of IVabradinE; LV, left ventricular; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; LVSD, left ventricular systolic dysfunction; MI, myocardial infarction; NS, not significant; od, once daily; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention; QOL, quality of life; REDUCTION, Reduction of ischemic events by reduction of heart rate in the treatment of stable angina with ivabradine; RIVENDEL, Heart Rate reduction by IVabradine for improvement of ENDothELial function in patients with coronary artery disease; RRR, relative risk reduction; SA, stable angina; SIGNIFY, Study assessInG the morbidity-mortality beNefits of the If inhibitor ivabradine in patients with coronarY artery disease; SHIFT, Systolic Heart failure treatment with the I f inhibitor ivabradine Trial; TAO, time to angina onset; TED, total exercise duration; TLA, time to limiting angina; TST, time to 1 mm ST-segment depression; wk, week.