Authors
Milton Packer, Wilson S Colucci, Jonathan D Sackner-Bernstein, Chang-seng Liang, David A Goldscher, Israel Freeman, Marrick L Kukin, Vithal Kinhal, James E Udelson, Marc Klapholz, Stephen S Gottlieb, David Pearle, Robert J Cody, John J Gregory, Nikki E Kantrowitz, Thierry H LeJemtel, Sarah T Young, Mary Ann Lukas, Neil H Shusterman
Publication date
1996/12/1
Journal
Circulation
Volume
94
Issue
11
Pages
2793-2799
Publisher
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Description
Background Carvedilol has improved the symptomatic status of patients with moderate to severe heart failure in single-center studies, but its clinical effects have not been evaluated in large, multicenter trials.
Methods and Results We enrolled 278 patients with moderate to severe heart failure (6-minute walk distance, 150 to 450 m) and a left ventricular ejection fraction ≤0.35 at 31 centers. After an open-label, run-in period, each patient was randomly assigned (double-blind) to either placebo (n=145) or carvedilol (n=133; target dose, 25 to 50 mg BID) for 6 months, while background therapy with digoxin, diuretics, and an ACE inhibitor remained constant. Compared with placebo, patients in the carvedilol group had a greater frequency of symptomatic improvement and lower risk of clinical deterioration, as evaluated by changes in the NYHA functional class (P=.014) or by a global assessment of progress judged …
Total citations
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