Referencia nÂș 1
Pitt B, Zannad F, Remme
WJ, Cody R, Castaigne A, Perez A, Palensky J, Wittes J
The effect of spironolactone on morbidity and mortality in patients with severe
heart failure. Randomized Aldactone Evaluation Study Investigators
N Engl J Med 1999 Sep 2 341:10 709-17
Abstracto
BACKGROUND
AND METHODS: Aldosterone
is important in the pathophysiology of heart failure. In a doubleblind study,
we enrolled 1663 patients who had severe heart failure and a left ventricular
ejection fraction of no more than 35 percent and who were being treated with
an angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitor, a loop diuretic, and in most cases
digoxin. A total of 822 patients were randomly assigned to receive 25 mg of
spironolactone daily, and 841 to receive placebo. The primary end point was
death from all causes.
RESULTS: The trial was discontinued early, after
a mean follow-up period of 24 months, because an interim analysis determined
that spironolactone was efficacious. There were 386 deaths in the placebo group
(46 percent) and 284 in the spironolactone group (35 percent; relative risk
of death, 0.70; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.60 to 0.82; P<0.001). This
30 percent reduction in the risk of death among patients in the spironolactone
group was attributed to a lower risk of both death from progressive heart failure
and sudden death from cardiac causes. The frequency of hospitalization for worsening
heart failure was 35 percent lower in the spironolactone group than in the placebo
group (relative risk of hospitalization, 0.65; 95 percent confidence interval,
0.54 to 0.77; P<0.001). In addition, patients who received spironolactone had
a significant improvement in the symptoms of heart failure, as assessed on the
basis of the New York Heart Association functional class (P<0.001). Gynecomastia
or breast pain was reported in 10 percent of men who were treated with spironolactone,
as compared with 1 percent of men in the placebo group (P<0.001). The incidence
of serious hyperkalemia was minimal in both groups of patients.
CONCLUSIONS: Blockade of aldosterone receptors
by spironolactone, in addition to standard therapy, substantially reduces the
risk of both morbidity and death among patients with severe heart failure.