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High risk patients should receive ramipril irrespective of their blood pressure
The Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation study
(HOPE), has shown beneficial effects of the angiotensin converting
enzyme inhibitor ramipril on cardiovascular events and disease
progression.1 In this issue the investigators describe the
results of preventing stroke (p 699).2 The findings
clearly show that ramipril substantially decreased the risk of stroke
and transient ischaemic attacks in 9297 patients with high
cardiovascular risk. A 32% relative risk reduction was found, while
the reduction in blood pressure was only 3.8 mm Hg (systolic) and 2.8 mm Hg (diastolic). This benefit was greater than expected from prior
meta-analyses of epidemiological studies or trials in hypertension
studies. The results have important implications for the primary and
secondary prevention of stroke.
Firstly, it must be emphasised that hypertension is still the most
important risk factor for stroke, as shown in all studies on
hypertension in recent decades,3 and more recently in the PROGRESS study, in which an average blood pressure reduction of 9/4 mm
Hg decreased the risk by around 28%.4 Also in HOPE the highest risk for stroke was found within patients in the placebo group
with blood pressure greater than 140/90 mm Hg. A strict normotensive
blood pressure adjustment should be crucial for the physician in
primary and secondary prevention of stroke Secondly, HOPE focused on patients with high cardiovascular risk and
controlled blood pressure. Patients with uncontrolled hypertension were
excluded; thus HOPE is not a hypertension study. The angiotensin
converting enzyme inhibitor ramipril decreased the risk for stroke
independent of reduction in blood pressure. There was a beneficial
effect even in patients with blood pressure less than 129/79 mm Hg. The
beneficial effects of the treatment were seen in all subgroups
examined. This shows that high risk patients should be treated with
ramipril in addition to other preventive measures irrespective of their
initial blood pressure.
The underlying mechanisms by which angiotensin converting enzyme
inhibitors prevent vascular events have been discussed widely. The
protective effects of these drugs on the vascular wall are possibly
explained by decreased oxidative stress and decreased proliferative and
inflammatory responses resulting in a beneficial effect on the
progression of atherosclerotic plaques.5 The anti-inflammatory response of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition may lead to more plaque stabilisation.6
These causal concepts are supported by the SECURE study, a substudy in
which progression of atherosclerosis was significantly reduced by
ramipril compared with placebo.7 Importantly, the effect
of a 10 mg dose, as used in the HOPE study, was better than 2.5 mg. This underlines the need for titrating ramipril to a higher dose to
exploit its full preventive potential. One cannot assume, however, that
similar outcomes would occur with other angiotensin converting enzyme
inhibitors or with different dosages, although it is possible.
Angiotensin 1 antagonists have yet to prove similar long term benefits.
Thirdly, patients who have previously been treated with acetylsalicylic
acid tend to benefit from ramipril less than patients who have not been
treated with acetylsalicylic acid. Similarly, patients with a
history of cerebral events This raises the question of interaction of acetylsalicylic acid
and angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors. It is not possible to
understand from the HOPE study the extent to which the subgroup of
patients with stroke benefits from the combination of acetylsalicylic acid and ramipril, because of the small number of patients. However, it
is already known from cardiovascular studies that the beneficial effect
of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors can be weakened by
acetylsalicylic acid.8
This raises a very important question. Since acetylsalicylic acid is
one of the best documented treatments in secondary prophylaxis of
stroke, the effectiveness of its combination with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors must be urgently proved. The positive effects in HOPE occurred in more than 70% of patients in the context of treatment with acetylsalicylic acid. The recommendation at present
should be not to exclude acetylsalicylic acid or angiotensin converting
enzyme inhibitors when there is an indication for both substances. Low
dose acetylsalicylic acid appears to be more favourable. Adenosine
diphosphate antagonists may constitute an alternative to
acetylsalicylic acid but there are no studies yet to prove long term superiority.
Fourthly, the main target of treatment is not only to reduce
quantitatively the risk of stroke and fatal events but to improve the
quality of life for survivors of strokes by reducing disability, cognitive impairment, and dementia. This would also entail substantial financial savings due to reduced need for care.
In HOPE, fatal stroke was reduced by 61%, non-fatal stroke was
reduced by 24%, and functional and cognitive outcomes improved with
ramipril. Significantly fewer patients on ramipril experienced functional impairment, impaired consciousness, speech, and swallowing. Thus the two main goals of treatment for stroke prevention were achieved in HOPE.
Medizinische Klinik, St Josefs Hospital, D-49661 Cloppenburg,
Germany
a goal that is not achieved
even in well developed countries.
who have the highest risk for
stroke
benefit less from ramipril than patients without a similar
history. It must be assumed that most of these patients were treated
with acetylsalicylic acid. These differences were, however, not significant.
Stephan Lüders
| 1. |
The Heart Outcome Prevention Evaluation Study Investigators.
Effects of an angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitor, ramipril, on cardiovascular events in high-risk patients
N Engl J Med
2000;
342:
145-153 |
| 2. |
Bosch J, Yusuf S, Pogue J, Sleight P, Lonn E, Rangoonwala B, et al, on behalf of HOPE.
Use of ramipril in preventing stroke: double blind randomised trial.
BMJ
2002;
324:
699-702 |
| 3. | Collins R, Peto R, MacMahon S, Herbert P, Fiebach NH, Eberlein KA, et al. Blood pressure, stroke, and coronary heart disease. Part 2, short-term reductions in blood pressure: overview of randomised drug trials in their epidemiological context. Lancet 1990; 335: 827-838[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]. |
| 4. | PROGRESS Collaborative Group. Randomised trial of a perindopril-based blood-pressure-lowering regimen among 6105 individuals with previous stroke or transient ischemic attack Lancet 2001; 358: 1033-1041[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]. |
| 5. |
Lonn EM, Yusuf S, Jha P.
Emerging role of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors in cardiac and vascular protection.
Circulation
1994;
90:
2056-2069 |
| 6. | Pepine CJ. Improved endothelial function with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors. Am J Cardiol 1997; 79: 29-32[ISI][Medline]. |
| 7. | Lonn E. Modifying the natural history of atherosclerosis: The SECURE trial IJCP supplement 2001; 117: 13-21. |
| 8. |
Stys T, Lawson WE, Smaldone GC, Stys A.
Does aspirin attenuate the beneficial effects of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition in heart failure?
Arch Intern Med
2000;
160:
1409-1413 |
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