Rate of heart failure and 1-year survival for older people receiving low-dose beta-blocker therapy after myocardial infarction.
Rochon, Paula A. ; Tu, Jack V. ; Anderson, Geoffrey M. ; Gurwitz, Jerry H. ; Clark, Jocalyn P. ; Lau, Paula ; Szalai, John Paul ; Sykora, Kathy ; Naylor, C. David
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UMass Chan Affiliations
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Keywords
Age Distribution
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Canada
Cohort Studies
Comorbidity
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
Humans
Myocardial Infarction
Odds Ratio
Proportional Hazards Models
Recurrence
Risk
Sex Distribution
Survival Rate
Health Services Research
Medicine and Health Sciences
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many older people do not receive beta-blocker therapy after myocardial infarction or receive doses lower than those tested in trials, perhaps because physicians fear that beta-blockers may precipitate heart failure. We examined the relation between use of beta-blockers, the dose used, and hospital admission for heart failure and 1-year survival in a cohort of all older patients surviving myocardial infarction in Ontario, Canada. METHODS: We collected data on a cohort of 13,623 patients aged 66 years or older who were discharged from hospital after a myocardial infarction and who did not receive beta-blocker therapy or received low, standard, or high doses. We used Cox's proportional-hazards models to study the association of dose with admission for heart failure and survival with adjustment for factors including age, sex, and comorbidity. FINDINGS: Among 8232 patients with no previous history of heart failure, dispensing of beta-blocker therapy was associated with a 43% reduction in subsequent admission for heart failure (adjusted risk ratio 0.57 [95% CI 0.48-0.69]) compared with patients not dispensed this therapy. Among the 4681 patients prescribed beta-blockers, the risk of admission was greater in the high-dose than in the low-dose group (1.53 [1.01-2.31]). Among all 13,623 patients in the cohort, 2326 (17.1%) died by 1 year. Compared with those not dispensed beta-blocker therapy, the adjusted risk ratio for mortality was lower for all three doses (low 0.40 [0.34-0.47], standard 0.36 [0.31-0.42], high 0.43 [0.33-0.56]). INTERPRETATION: Compared with high-dose beta-blocker therapy, low-dose treatment is associated with a lower rate of hospital admission for heart failure and has a similar 1-year survival benefit. Our findings support the need for a randomised controlled trial comparing doses of beta-blocker therapy in elderly patients.
Source
Lancet. 2000 Aug 19;356(9230):639-44.