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DOI: 10.1056/nejm200105313442201
¤ OpenAccess: Bronze
This work has “Bronze” OA status. This means it is free to read on the publisher landing page, but without any identifiable license.

Effect of Carvedilol on Survival in Severe Chronic Heart Failure

Milton Packer,Andrew J.S. Coats,Michael B. Fowler,Hugo A. Katus,Henry Krum,Paul Mohaçsi,Jean‐Lucien Rouleau,Michał Tendera,A Castaigne,Ellen B. Roecker,M. Schultz,David L. DeMets

Carvedilol
Medicine
Heart failure
2001
Beta-blocking agents reduce the risk of hospitalization and death in patients with mild-to-moderate heart failure, but little is known about their effects in severe heart failure.We evaluated 2289 patients who had symptoms of heart failure at rest or on minimal exertion, who were clinically euvolemic, and who had an ejection fraction of less than 25 percent. In a double-blind fashion, we randomly assigned 1133 patients to placebo and 1156 patients to treatment with carvedilol for a mean period of 10.4 months, during which standard therapy for heart failure was continued. Patients who required intensive care, had marked fluid retention, or were receiving intravenous vasodilators or positive inotropic drugs were excluded.There were 190 deaths in the placebo group and 130 deaths in the carvedilol group. This difference reflected a 35 percent decrease in the risk of death with carvedilol (95 percent confidence interval, 19 to 48 percent; P=0.00013, unadjusted; P=0.0014, adjusted for interim analyses). A total of 507 patients died or were hospitalized in the placebo group, as compared with 425 in the carvedilol group. This difference reflected a 24 percent decrease in the combined risk of death or hospitalization with carvedilol (95 percent confidence interval, 13 to 33 percent; P<0.001). The favorable effects on both end points were seen consistently in all the subgroups we examined, including patients with a history of recent or recurrent cardiac decompensation. Fewer patients in the carvedilol group than in the placebo group withdrew because of adverse effects or for other reasons (P=0.02).The previously reported benefits of carvedilol with regard to morbidity and mortality in patients with mild-to-moderate heart failure were also apparent in the patients with severe heart failure who were evaluated in this trial.
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    Effect of Carvedilol on Survival in Severe Chronic Heart Failure” is a paper by Milton Packer Andrew J.S. Coats Michael B. Fowler Hugo A. Katus Henry Krum Paul Mohaçsi Jean‐Lucien Rouleau Michał Tendera A Castaigne Ellen B. Roecker M. Schultz David L. DeMets published in 2001. It has an Open Access status of “bronze”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.