High doses of lisinopril led to 12% lower risk of death or hospitalization and 24% fewer heart failure hospitalizations compared to low doses.
Does high-dose lisinopril reduce morbidity and mortality compared to low-dose lisinopril in patients with chronic heart failure?
Patients with New York Heart Association class II to IV heart failure and an ejection fraction ≤30%
High doses of lisinopril (32.5 to 35 mg daily) added to background heart failure therapy
Low doses of lisinopril (2.5 to 5.0 mg daily) added to background heart failure therapy
Death and composite of death or hospitalization for any reasonhard clinical
High-dose lisinopril significantly reduces the combined risk of death or hospitalization compared to low-dose lisinopril in patients with chronic heart failure, supporting the use of higher target doses.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
Background —Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors are generally prescribed by physicians in doses lower than the large doses that have been shown to reduce morbidity and mortality in patients with heart failure. It is unclear, however, if low doses and high doses of ACE inhibitors have similar benefits. Methods and Results —We randomly assigned 3164 patients with New York Heart Association class II to IV heart failure and an ejection fraction ≤30% to double-blind treatment with either low doses (2.5 to 5.0 mg daily, n=1596) or high doses (32.5 to 35 mg daily, n=1568) of the ACE inhibitor, lisinopril, for 39 to 58 months, while background therapy for heart failure was continued. When compared with the low-dose group, patients in the high-dose group had a nonsignificant 8% lower risk of death ( P =0.128) but a significant 12% lower risk of death or hospitalization for any reason ( P =0.002) and 24% fewer hospitalizations for heart failure ( P =0.002). Dizziness and renal insufficiency was observed more frequently in the high-dose group, but the 2 groups were similar in the number of patients requiring discontinuation of the study medication. Conclusions —These findings indicate that patients with heart failure should not generally be maintained on very low doses of an ACE inhibitor (unless these are the only doses that can be tolerated) and suggest that the difference in efficacy between intermediate and high doses of an ACE inhibitor (if any) is likely to be very small.
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Milton Packer
Heart Failure & Transplant
Philip A. Poole‐Wilson
Heart Failure & Transplant
Paul W. Armstrong
General Cardiology
Circulation
University of California, San Francisco
Imperial College London
Karolinska Institutet
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Packer et al. (Tue,) reported a other. High doses of lisinopril led to 12% lower risk of death or hospitalization and 24% fewer heart failure hospitalizations compared to low doses.
synapsesocial.com/papers/697817f9f226c9e734a25b73 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.100.23.2312