BACKGROUND:Intravenous heparin is at least as effective as aspirin in preventing new cardiac events after an episode of unstable coronary artery disease (CAD), though the benefits are short-lived. Low-molecular-weight heparin has similar antithrombotic properties but can be given subcutaneously and is therefore suitable for long-term treatment. We have investigated whether subcutaneous low- molecular-weight heparin, in addition to aspirin and antianginal drugs, is protective against new cardiac events in unstable CAD. METHODS:1506 patients with unstable CAD (unstable angina or non-Q-wave myocardial infarction) took part in a double-blind trial and were randomly assigned subcutaneous dalteparin (Fragmin; 120 IU per kg bodyweight [maximum 10 000 IU] twice daily for 6 days then 7500 IU once daily for the next 35-45 days) or placebo injections. The primary endpoint was the rate of death and new myocardial infarction during the first 6 days. Secondary endpoints were the rates of death and new myocardial infarction after 40 and 150 days, the frequency of revascularisation procedures and need for heparin infusion, and a composite endpoint. FINDINGS: During the first 6 days the rate of death and new myocardial infarction was lower in the dalteparin group than in the placebo group (13 [1.8%] vs 36 [4.8%]; risk ratio 0.37 [95% CI 0.20-0.68]), as were the frequencies of need for intravenous heparin (28 [3.8%] vs 58 [7.7%]; 0.49 [0.32- 0.75]) and need for revascularisation (3 [0.4%] vs 9 [1.2%]; 0.33 [0.10-1.10]). The composite endpoint (death, myocardial infarction, revascularisation, intravenous heparin) also showed a significant difference in favour of dalteparin (40 [5.4%] vs 78 [10.3%]; 0.52 [0.37-0.75]). At 40 days the differences in rates of death and myocardial infarction and the composite endpoint persisted, although subgroup analysis showed that the effect was confined to non-smokers (80% of sample). Survival analysis showed a risk of reactivation and reinfarction when the dose was decreased, more pronounced in smokers. 4-5 months after the end of treatment, there were no significant differences in the rates of death, new myocardial infarction, or revascularisation. The regimen was safe and compliance was adequate. INTERPRETATION: We recommend that treatment with a combination of dalteparin and aspirin for at least 6 days should be considered in patients with unstable CAD to reduce the risk of new cardiac events and to allow time for risk stratification and selection of a long-term treatment strategy. Long-term dalteparin treatment instead of or in addition to early invasive procedures warrants further assessment.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: Intravenous heparin is at least as effective as aspirin in preventing new cardiac events after an episode of unstable coronary artery disease (CAD), though the benefits are short-lived. Low-molecular-weight heparin has similar antithrombotic properties but can be given subcutaneously and is therefore suitable for long-term treatment. We have investigated whether subcutaneous low- molecular-weight heparin, in addition to aspirin and antianginal drugs, is protective against new cardiac events in unstable CAD. METHODS: 1506 patients with unstable CAD (unstable angina or non-Q-wave myocardial infarction) took part in a double-blind trial and were randomly assigned subcutaneous dalteparin (Fragmin; 120 IU per kg bodyweight [maximum 10 000 IU] twice daily for 6 days then 7500 IU once daily for the next 35-45 days) or placebo injections. The primary endpoint was the rate of death and new myocardial infarction during the first 6 days. Secondary endpoints were the rates of death and new myocardial infarction after 40 and 150 days, the frequency of revascularisation procedures and need for heparin infusion, and a composite endpoint. FINDINGS: During the first 6 days the rate of death and new myocardial infarction was lower in the dalteparin group than in the placebo group (13 [1.8%] vs 36 [4.8%]; risk ratio 0.37 [95% CI 0.20-0.68]), as were the frequencies of need for intravenous heparin (28 [3.8%] vs 58 [7.7%]; 0.49 [0.32- 0.75]) and need for revascularisation (3 [0.4%] vs 9 [1.2%]; 0.33 [0.10-1.10]). The composite endpoint (death, myocardial infarction, revascularisation, intravenous heparin) also showed a significant difference in favour of dalteparin (40 [5.4%] vs 78 [10.3%]; 0.52 [0.37-0.75]). At 40 days the differences in rates of death and myocardial infarction and the composite endpoint persisted, although subgroup analysis showed that the effect was confined to non-smokers (80% of sample). Survival analysis showed a risk of reactivation and reinfarction when the dose was decreased, more pronounced in smokers. 4-5 months after the end of treatment, there were no significant differences in the rates of death, new myocardial infarction, or revascularisation. The regimen was safe and compliance was adequate. INTERPRETATION: We recommend that treatment with a combination of dalteparin and aspirin for at least 6 days should be considered in patients with unstable CAD to reduce the risk of new cardiac events and to allow time for risk stratification and selection of a long-term treatment strategy. Long-term dalteparin treatment instead of or in addition to early invasive procedures warrants further assessment.
Authors: F W Verheugt; R C Becker; M E Bertrand; C Bode; J H Chesebro; J G Cleland; R Conti; W S Hillis; W Klein; A Maseri; A G Turpie; L Wallentin; D D Waters Journal: Clin Cardiol Date: 1999-09 Impact factor: 2.882
Authors: F López-Jiménez; M Brito; Y W Aude; P Scheinberg; M Kaplan; D A Dixon; N Schneiderman; J F Trejo; L H López-Salazar; E J Ramírez-Barba; R Kalil; C Ortiz; J Goyos; A Buenaño; S Kottiech; G A Lamas Journal: Arch Med Res Date: 2000 Jul-Aug Impact factor: 2.235