Acute Myocardial Infarction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Clopidogrel Or Metoprolol in Myocardial Infarction Trial
COMMIT/CCS2 is a large randomised trial of the effects of clopidogrel plus Aspirin versus Aspirin alone in acute heart disease. Patients presenting within 24 hours of the onset of suspected acute MI were potentially eligible provided they were thought to have ST elevation or other ischaemic ECG abnormality with no clear indication for, or contraindication to, trial treatment. All patients were to be given 162 mg ASA daily and, in addition, 75 mg clopidogrel daily or matching placebo for 4 weeks or until prior discharge or death. (Patients were also randomised separately in a 2 X 2 factorial design between metoprolol versus placebo.) The two main study endpoints are death and the composite outcome of death, non-fatal reinfarction or stroke during the scheduled treatment period in hospital.
Clopidogrel
Despite considerable improvements in the emergency treatment of acute myocardial infarction
(MI), including the use of aspirin, early mortality and morbidity remain high. The
antiplatelet agent clopidogrel adds to the benefit of aspirin in acute coronary syndromes
without ST-segment elevation, but its effects on mortality and morbidity in patients with
ST-elevation MI were unclear.
45,852 patients admitted to 1250 hospitals within 24 hours of the onset of suspected acute
MI were randomly allocated to receive clopidogrel 75 mg daily or matching placebo (both in
addition to aspirin 162 mg daily). 93% had ST-segment elevation or bundle branch block, and
7% had ST-segment depression. Treatment was to continue until discharge or up to a maximum
of 4 weeks in hospital (mean 15 days in survivors), and 93% completed it. The two
pre-specified co-primary outcomes were: (i) the composite of death, reinfarction or stroke;
and (ii) death from any cause during the scheduled treatment period. Comparisons were
between all clopidogrel-allocated and all placebo-allocated patients (ie,
“intention-to-treat”), and used the log-rank method.
Allocation to clopidogrel produced a highly significant 9% (95% CI 3-14) proportional
reduction in the primary composite outcome of death, reinfarction or stroke (2121 [9.2%]
clopidogrel vs 2310 [10.1%] placebo; p=0.002), corresponding to 9 (SE 3) fewer events per
1000 patients treated for about 2 weeks. There was also a significant 7% (95% CI 1-13)
proportional reduction in the co-primary outcome of any death (1726 [7.5%] vs 1845 [8.1%];
p=0.03). These effects on death, reinfarction and stroke appeared to be consistent across a
wide range of patients and independent of other treatments being used. Considering all
transfused, fatal or cerebral bleeds together, no significant excess risk was observed with
clopidogrel, either overall (134 [0.58%] vs 125 [0.55%]; p=0.59), or among patients aged 70
years or older (50 [0.84%] vs 43 [0.72%]; p=0.48) or among those given fibrinolytic therapy
(74 [0.65%] vs 72 [0.63%]; p=0.88).
In a wide range of patients with acute MI, adding clopidogrel 75 mg daily to aspirin and
other standard treatments (such as fibrinolytic therapy) reduces mortality and major
vascular events in hospital, without any material increase in major bleeding.
Metoprolol
Despite previous randomised trials of early beta-blocker therapy in the emergency treatment
of suspected acute myocardial infarction (MI), substantial uncertainty has persisted about
the value of adding it to currently standard interventions (eg, aspirin and fibrinolytic
therapy), and the balance of potential benefits and hazards was unclear even in high-risk
patients.
45852 patients admitted to 1250 hospitals within 24 hours of the onset of suspected acute MI
were randomly allocated to receive metoprolol (up to 15 mg intravenous followed by 200 mg
oral daily) or matching placebo. 93% had ST-segment elevation or bundle branch block, and 7%
had ST-segment depression. Treatment was to continue until discharge or up to a maximum of 4
weeks in hospital (mean 15 days in survivors), and 89% completed it. The two pre-specified
co-primary outcomes were: (i) the composite of death, reinfarction or cardiac arrest; and
(ii) death from any cause during the scheduled treatment period. Comparisons were between
all metoprolol-allocated and all placebo-allocated patients (ie, “intention-to-treat”), and
used the log-rank method.
Neither of the co-primary outcomes was significantly reduced by allocation to metoprolol.
For the primary composite outcome of death, reinfarction, or cardiac arrest, 2166 (9.4%)
patients had at least one such event among the 22 929 allocated metoprolol compared with
2261 (9.9%) among the 22 923 allocated matching placebo (odds ratio [OR] 0.96 [95% CI
0.90-1.01]; p=0.1). For the co-primary outcome of death alone, there were 1774 (7.7%) in the
metoprolol group versus 1797 (7.8%) in the placebo group (OR 0.99 [0.92-1.05]; p=0.69).
Allocation to metoprolol was associated with 5 fewer people having reinfarction (464 [2.0%]
metoprolol vs 568 [2.5%] placebo; OR 0.82 [0.72-0.92]; p=0.001) and 5 fewer having
ventricular fibrillation (581 [2.5%] vs 698 [3.0%]; OR 0.83 [0.75-0.93]; p=0.001) per 1000
treated. Overall, these reductions were counter-balanced by 11 more per 1000 allocated
metoprolol developing cardiogenic shock (1141 [5.0%] vs 885 [3.9%]; OR 1.30 [1.19-1.41];
p<0.00001). The excess of cardiogenic shock was chiefly during days 0-1 after
hospitalisation, whereas the reductions in reinfarction and ventricular fibrillation emerged
more gradually. Consequently, the overall effect on death, reinfarction, arrest or shock was
significantly adverse during days 0-1 and significantly beneficial thereafter. There was
substantial net hazard among haemodynamically unstable patients and moderate net benefit
among those who were relatively stable, particularly after days 0-1.
The use of early beta-blocker therapy in acute MI reduces the risks of reinfarction and
ventricular fibrillation, but increases the risk of cardiogenic shock, especially during the
first day or so after hospitalisation. Consequently, it may generally be prudent to consider
starting beta-blocker therapy in hospital only when the haemodynamic condition following MI
has stabilized (and then, based on previous evidence, to continue such therapy long-term
following discharge).
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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