- Title
- Effect of amiodarone on clinical status and left ventricular function in patients
with congestive heart failure. CHF-STAT Investigators [published erratum appears in
Circulation 1996 Nov 15;94(10):2668]
- Author
- Massie BM; Fisher SG; Radford M; Deedwania PC; Singh BN; Fletcher RD; Singh SN
- Address
- Department of Veterans Affairs Cooperative Studies Program, Washington, DC, USA.
- Source
- Circulation, 93(12):2128-34 1996 Jun 15
- Abstract
- BACKGROUND. Although trials of amiodarone therapy in patients with congestive
heart failure have produced discordant results with regard to effects on survival, most
studies have reported a significant rise in left ventricular ejection fraction during
long-term therapy. In the present study, we determined whether this increase in ejection
fraction is associated with an improvement in the symptoms and/or physical findings of
heart failure or a reduction in the number of hospitalizations for heart failure.
METHODS AND RESULTS. In the Department of Veterans Affairs cooperative study of amiodarone
in congestive heart failure, 674 patients with New York Heart Association class II through
IV symptoms and ejection fractions of < or = 40% were treated with amiodarone or
placebo for a median of 45 months in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled
protocol. Clinical assessments and radionuclide ejection fraction were performed at
baseline and after 6, 12, and 24 months. Compared with the placebo group, ejection
fraction increased more in the amiodarone group at each time point (8.1 +/- 10.2%
[mean +/- SD] versus 2.6 +/- 7.9% at 6 months, 8.0 +/- 10.9% versus 2.7 +/- 8.0% at 12
months, and 8.8 +/- 10.1% versus 1.9 +/- 9.4% after 24 months, all P < .001). However,
this difference was not associated with greater clinical improvement, lesser diuretic
requirements, or fewer hospitalizations for heart failure (11.1% for amiodarone and
13.6% for placebo group; overall relative risk in the amiodarone group, 0.81 [95%
CI, 0.56 to 1.10], P = .18). Of note is the trend toward a reduction in the combined end
point of hospitalizations and cardiac deaths (relative risk, 0.82 [CI, 0.65 to 1.03], P =
.08), which was significant in patients with nonischemic etiology (relative risk, 0.56
[CI, 0.36 to 0.87], P = .01) and absent in the ischemic group (relative risk, 0.95).
CONCLUSIONS. Although amiodarone therapy resulted in a substantial increase in left
ventricular ejection fraction in patients with congestive heart failure, this was not
associated with clinical benefit in the population as a whole. The substantial reduction
in the combined end point of cardiac death plus hospitalizations for heart failure in the
nonischemic group suggests possible benefit in these patients.