Cargando…

Beta-blocker effect on ST-segment: a prespecified analysis of the EARLY-BAMI randomised trial

OBJECTIVE: The effect of early intravenous (IV) beta-blockers (BBs) administration in patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention (pPCI) on ST-segment deviation is unknown. We undertook a prespecified secondary analysis of the Early Beta-blocker Administration before primary PCI i...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Fabris, Enrico, Hermanides, Renicus, Roolvink, Vincent, Ibanez, Borja, Ottervanger, Jan Paul, Pizarro, Gonzalo, van Royen, Niels, Mateos-Rodriguez, Alonso, Dambrink, Jan Henk, Albarran, Agustin, Fernández-Avilés, Francisco, Botas, Javier, Remkes, Wouter, Hernandez-Jaras, Victoria, Kedhi, Elvin, Zamorano, Jose, Alfonso, Fernando, García-Lledó, Alberto, van Leeuwen, Maarten, Nijveldt, Robin, Postma, Sonja, Kolkman, Evelien, Gosselink, Marcel, de Smet, Bart, Rasoul, Saman, Lipsic, Erik, Piek, Jan J, Fuster, Valentin, van 't Hof, Arnoud WJ
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7737101/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33318150
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/openhrt-2020-001316
_version_ 1783622886284591104
author Fabris, Enrico
Hermanides, Renicus
Roolvink, Vincent
Ibanez, Borja
Ottervanger, Jan Paul
Pizarro, Gonzalo
van Royen, Niels
Mateos-Rodriguez, Alonso
Dambrink, Jan Henk
Albarran, Agustin
Fernández-Avilés, Francisco
Botas, Javier
Remkes, Wouter
Hernandez-Jaras, Victoria
Kedhi, Elvin
Zamorano, Jose
Alfonso, Fernando
García-Lledó, Alberto
van Leeuwen, Maarten
Nijveldt, Robin
Postma, Sonja
Kolkman, Evelien
Gosselink, Marcel
de Smet, Bart
Rasoul, Saman
Lipsic, Erik
Piek, Jan J
Fuster, Valentin
van 't Hof, Arnoud WJ
author_facet Fabris, Enrico
Hermanides, Renicus
Roolvink, Vincent
Ibanez, Borja
Ottervanger, Jan Paul
Pizarro, Gonzalo
van Royen, Niels
Mateos-Rodriguez, Alonso
Dambrink, Jan Henk
Albarran, Agustin
Fernández-Avilés, Francisco
Botas, Javier
Remkes, Wouter
Hernandez-Jaras, Victoria
Kedhi, Elvin
Zamorano, Jose
Alfonso, Fernando
García-Lledó, Alberto
van Leeuwen, Maarten
Nijveldt, Robin
Postma, Sonja
Kolkman, Evelien
Gosselink, Marcel
de Smet, Bart
Rasoul, Saman
Lipsic, Erik
Piek, Jan J
Fuster, Valentin
van 't Hof, Arnoud WJ
author_sort Fabris, Enrico
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: The effect of early intravenous (IV) beta-blockers (BBs) administration in patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention (pPCI) on ST-segment deviation is unknown. We undertook a prespecified secondary analysis of the Early Beta-blocker Administration before primary PCI in patients with ST-elevation Myocardial Infarction (EARLY-BAMI) trial to investigate the effect of early IV BB on ST-segment deviation. METHODS: The EARLY-BAMI trial randomised patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) to IV metoprolol (2×5 mg bolus) or matched placebo before pPCI. The prespecified outcome, evaluated by an independent core laboratory blinded to study treatment, was the residual ST-segment deviation 1 hour after pPCI (ie, the percentage of patients with >3 mm cumulative ST deviation at 1 hour after pPCI). RESULTS: An ECG for the evaluation of residual ST-segment deviation 1 hour after pPCI was available in 442 out of 683 randomised patients. The BB group had a lower heart rate after pPCI compared with placebo (71.2±13.2 vs 74.3±13.6, p=0.016); however, no differences were noted in the percentages of patients with >3 mm cumulative ST deviation at 1 hour after pPCI (58.6% vs 54.1%, p=0.38, in BB vs placebo, respectively) neither a significant difference was found for the percentages of patients in each of the four prespecified groups (normalised ST-segment; 1–3 mm; 4–6 mm;>6 mm residual ST-deviation). CONCLUSIONS: In patients with STEMI, who were being transported for primary PCI, early IV BB administration did not significantly affect ST-segment deviation after pPCI compared with placebo. The neutral result of early IV BB administration on an early marker of pharmacological effect is consistent with the absence of subsequent improvement of clinical outcomes.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7737101
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-77371012020-12-28 Beta-blocker effect on ST-segment: a prespecified analysis of the EARLY-BAMI randomised trial Fabris, Enrico Hermanides, Renicus Roolvink, Vincent Ibanez, Borja Ottervanger, Jan Paul Pizarro, Gonzalo van Royen, Niels Mateos-Rodriguez, Alonso Dambrink, Jan Henk Albarran, Agustin Fernández-Avilés, Francisco Botas, Javier Remkes, Wouter Hernandez-Jaras, Victoria Kedhi, Elvin Zamorano, Jose Alfonso, Fernando García-Lledó, Alberto van Leeuwen, Maarten Nijveldt, Robin Postma, Sonja Kolkman, Evelien Gosselink, Marcel de Smet, Bart Rasoul, Saman Lipsic, Erik Piek, Jan J Fuster, Valentin van 't Hof, Arnoud WJ Open Heart Coronary Artery Disease OBJECTIVE: The effect of early intravenous (IV) beta-blockers (BBs) administration in patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention (pPCI) on ST-segment deviation is unknown. We undertook a prespecified secondary analysis of the Early Beta-blocker Administration before primary PCI in patients with ST-elevation Myocardial Infarction (EARLY-BAMI) trial to investigate the effect of early IV BB on ST-segment deviation. METHODS: The EARLY-BAMI trial randomised patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) to IV metoprolol (2×5 mg bolus) or matched placebo before pPCI. The prespecified outcome, evaluated by an independent core laboratory blinded to study treatment, was the residual ST-segment deviation 1 hour after pPCI (ie, the percentage of patients with >3 mm cumulative ST deviation at 1 hour after pPCI). RESULTS: An ECG for the evaluation of residual ST-segment deviation 1 hour after pPCI was available in 442 out of 683 randomised patients. The BB group had a lower heart rate after pPCI compared with placebo (71.2±13.2 vs 74.3±13.6, p=0.016); however, no differences were noted in the percentages of patients with >3 mm cumulative ST deviation at 1 hour after pPCI (58.6% vs 54.1%, p=0.38, in BB vs placebo, respectively) neither a significant difference was found for the percentages of patients in each of the four prespecified groups (normalised ST-segment; 1–3 mm; 4–6 mm;>6 mm residual ST-deviation). CONCLUSIONS: In patients with STEMI, who were being transported for primary PCI, early IV BB administration did not significantly affect ST-segment deviation after pPCI compared with placebo. The neutral result of early IV BB administration on an early marker of pharmacological effect is consistent with the absence of subsequent improvement of clinical outcomes. BMJ Publishing Group 2020-12-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7737101/ /pubmed/33318150 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/openhrt-2020-001316 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
spellingShingle Coronary Artery Disease
Fabris, Enrico
Hermanides, Renicus
Roolvink, Vincent
Ibanez, Borja
Ottervanger, Jan Paul
Pizarro, Gonzalo
van Royen, Niels
Mateos-Rodriguez, Alonso
Dambrink, Jan Henk
Albarran, Agustin
Fernández-Avilés, Francisco
Botas, Javier
Remkes, Wouter
Hernandez-Jaras, Victoria
Kedhi, Elvin
Zamorano, Jose
Alfonso, Fernando
García-Lledó, Alberto
van Leeuwen, Maarten
Nijveldt, Robin
Postma, Sonja
Kolkman, Evelien
Gosselink, Marcel
de Smet, Bart
Rasoul, Saman
Lipsic, Erik
Piek, Jan J
Fuster, Valentin
van 't Hof, Arnoud WJ
Beta-blocker effect on ST-segment: a prespecified analysis of the EARLY-BAMI randomised trial
title Beta-blocker effect on ST-segment: a prespecified analysis of the EARLY-BAMI randomised trial
title_full Beta-blocker effect on ST-segment: a prespecified analysis of the EARLY-BAMI randomised trial
title_fullStr Beta-blocker effect on ST-segment: a prespecified analysis of the EARLY-BAMI randomised trial
title_full_unstemmed Beta-blocker effect on ST-segment: a prespecified analysis of the EARLY-BAMI randomised trial
title_short Beta-blocker effect on ST-segment: a prespecified analysis of the EARLY-BAMI randomised trial
title_sort beta-blocker effect on st-segment: a prespecified analysis of the early-bami randomised trial
topic Coronary Artery Disease
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7737101/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33318150
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/openhrt-2020-001316
work_keys_str_mv AT fabrisenrico betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT hermanidesrenicus betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT roolvinkvincent betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT ibanezborja betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT ottervangerjanpaul betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT pizarrogonzalo betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT vanroyenniels betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT mateosrodriguezalonso betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT dambrinkjanhenk betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT albarranagustin betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT fernandezavilesfrancisco betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT botasjavier betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT remkeswouter betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT hernandezjarasvictoria betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT kedhielvin betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT zamoranojose betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT alfonsofernando betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT garcialledoalberto betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT vanleeuwenmaarten betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT nijveldtrobin betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT postmasonja betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT kolkmanevelien betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT gosselinkmarcel betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT desmetbart betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT rasoulsaman betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT lipsicerik betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT piekjanj betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT fustervalentin betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial
AT vanthofarnoudwj betablockereffectonstsegmentaprespecifiedanalysisoftheearlybamirandomisedtrial