Department of Cardiology, Copenhagen University Hospital-Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg, 2000 Copenhagen, Denmark.
Department of Medicine, Drammen Hospital, Vestre Viken Trust, Institute of Behavioural Medicine, University of Oslo, 3004 Drammen, Norway.
Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Pharmacother. 2024 May 4;10(3):175-183. doi: 10.1093/ehjcvp/pvad093.
The evidence for beta-blocker therapy after myocardial infarction (MI) is randomized trials conducted more than 30 years ago, and the continued efficacy has been questioned.
The ongoing Danish (DANBLOCK) and Norwegian (BETAMI) randomized beta-blocker trials are joined to evaluate the effectiveness and risks of long-term beta-blocker therapy after MI. Patients with normal or mildly reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF ≥ 40%) will be randomized to open-label treatment with beta-blockers or no such therapy. The event-driven trial will randomize ∼5700 patients and continue until 950 primary endpoints have occurred. As of July 2023, 5228 patients have been randomized. Of the first 4000 patients randomized, median age was 62 years, 79% were men, 48% had a ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), and 84% had a normal LVEF. The primary endpoint is a composite of adjudicated recurrent MI, incident heart failure (HF), coronary revascularization, ischaemic stroke, all-cause mortality, malignant ventricular arrhythmia, or resuscitated cardiac arrest. The primary safety endpoint includes a composite of recurrent MI, HF, all-cause mortality, malignant ventricular arrhythmia, or resuscitated cardiac arrest 30 days after randomization. Secondary endpoints include each of the components of the primary endpoint, patient-reported outcomes, and other clinical outcomes linked to beta-blocker therapy. The primary analysis will be conducted according to the intention-to-treat principle using a Cox proportional hazards regression model. End of follow-up is expected in December 2024.
The combined BETAMI-DANBLOCK trial will have the potential to affect current clinical practice for beta-blocker therapy in patients with normal or mildly reduced LVEF after MI.
心肌梗死后(MI)β受体阻滞剂治疗的证据来自于 30 多年前的随机试验,其持续疗效受到质疑。
正在进行的丹麦(DANBLOCK)和挪威(BETAMI)随机β受体阻滞剂试验联合进行,以评估 MI 后长期β受体阻滞剂治疗的有效性和风险。左心室射血分数(LVEF≥40%)正常或轻度降低的患者将被随机分配接受开放性β受体阻滞剂治疗或不接受此类治疗。该事件驱动试验将随机分配约 5700 例患者,并持续至发生 950 例主要终点事件。截至 2023 年 7 月,已随机分配 5228 例患者。前 4000 例随机患者中,中位年龄为 62 岁,79%为男性,48%发生 ST 段抬高型心肌梗死(STEMI),84%LVEF 正常。主要终点是经裁决的复发性 MI、新发心力衰竭(HF)、冠状动脉血运重建、缺血性卒中等复合终点,全因死亡率、恶性室性心律失常或复苏性心脏骤停。主要安全性终点包括随机分组后 30 天内复发性 MI、HF、全因死亡率、恶性室性心律失常或复苏性心脏骤停的复合终点。次要终点包括主要终点的每个组成部分、患者报告的结局以及与β受体阻滞剂治疗相关的其他临床结局。主要分析将根据意向治疗原则使用 Cox 比例风险回归模型进行。预计随访结束日期为 2024 年 12 月。
联合 BETAMI-DANBLOCK 试验有可能影响 MI 后 LVEF 正常或轻度降低患者β受体阻滞剂治疗的当前临床实践。