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By EMMA ROSS : AP Medical Writer
Jun 23, 2003 : 1:52 pm ET
LONDON -- A large head-to-head comparison of
two widely used heart drugs known as beta blockers found one
significantly superior in prolonging the lives of people with
chronic heart failure.
Some experts, however, said the results might
be different depending on the formulation of one of the drugs used.
Prognosis for chronic heart failure is poor,
with around half of patients dying within three to five years -- a
death rate similar to that of lung cancer.
In the largest such study to date, scientists
estimated that those taking carvedilol, also known as Coreg in the
United States or Dilatrend elsewhere, lived nearly 18 months longer
than those taking metroprolol, another beta blocker.
The study, paid for by F. Hoffmann-La Roche
and GlaxoSmithKline, marketers of carvedilol, and conducted by a
committee of European heart failure experts, was presented Monday at
a European heart failure conference in Strasbourg, France.
"Carvedilol's significant survival benefit
could mean thousands of lives saved each year. The results will have
a major impact on clinical practice," said lead investigator Dr.
Philip Poole-Wilson, professor of cardiology at Imperial College in
London.
However, Dr. Michal Tendera, European Society
of Cardiology heart failure spokesman, gave a cautious
interpretation of the results.
"This is most probably related to the drug,
but it may also be due to the different formulation of the
metroprolol used in this study compared to other studies of
metroprolol," said Tendera, a professor of cardiology at Silesian
School of Medicine in Katowice, Poland, who was not connected with
the study.
The study used a short-acting generic
metroprolol. Key research that established metroprolol as an
effective beta blocker used the long-acting version known as Toprol
XL and that research indicated the drug was as effective as
carvedilol or other beta blockers, although there has never been a
head-to-head comparison, Tendera noted.
Heart failure is a condition in which the
heart is weak and cannot pump enough blood. The heart tries to
compensate for its weakened pumping action by beating faster, which
puts more strain on it.
Drugs known as beta blockers are commonly
prescribed for the condition. They reduce the heart's tendency to
beat faster.
Experts suggest there may be more than 10
million people with chronic heart failure in Europe alone and
another 4.8 million in the United States, where the American Heart
Association estimates that about 550,000 new cases are diagnosed
every year.
The study, conducted in 15 European
countries, involved 3,029 patients with all degrees of chronic heart
failure. A total, of 1,511 people were given carvedilol and 1,518
got metroprolol, a generic drug. The patients were followed for
almost five years.
By the end of the study, 512, or 34 percent
of the carvedilol patients had died, compared with 600, or 40
percent, of the patients in the metroprolol group. The researchers
estimated that the average survival was 1.4 years longer in the
carvedilol group.
"There will be arguments about dose and
formulation," Poole-Wilson said. "But the bottom line is we have
compared two drugs and shown one is better than another."
The study could not determine why carvedilol
was better, but scientists believe it could be because it works
slightly differently.
Beta blockers block specific receptors --
beta receptors -- located on the heart cells, reducing the effects
of chemical messengers that increase heart rate.
The body has two main beta receptors: beta 1
and beta 2. Some beta-blockers, such as metroprolol, block beta 1
receptors. Others, such as carvedilol, block both beta 1 and beta 2
receptors. Carvedilol is believed to block other activities that
cause heart trouble.
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