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Landmark Projects

Throughout its history, the DCRI has designed and performed cutting-edge research projects. Besides innovation in the design and completion of clinical trials, the DCRI has also contributed extensively to clinical knowledge and advances in clinical practice. The following projects are a sample of those that have been particularly influential in both their innovations in clinical trial design and their contributions to the practice of medicine. Results slides for selected projects can be found here.

ASSENT-II
This international trial of 16,949 patients with acute coronary syndromes showed that an easily injected drug known as tenecteplase (TNK) could be as effective as the standard 90-minute infusion of alteplase in reducing mortality. Lancet 1999;354:716-722.

CARS
This 8,803-patient trial found that low, fixed doses of warfarin (an oral anti-clotting drug) combined with aspirin offered no benefit in preventing repeat heart attacks, among patients who had survived a heart attack, beyond that of aspirin alone. Lancet 1997;350:389-396.

CAVEAT-I
CAVEAT-I was the first major randomized trial of two cardiac devices. At 35 sites in the U.S. and Europe, 1012 patients were assigned to either atherectomy or angioplasty. Immediately after the procedure, the blockage in the coronary blood vessel was reduced to 50% or less significantly more often with atherectomy than with angioplasty (89% vs. 80%), and the immediate increase in vessel diameter was significantly increased with atherectomy. However, early complications and in-hospital costs were significantly increased with atherectomy, as was the risk of death or heart attack at 6 months (8.6% vs. 4.6%). The rate of repeat blockage also was similar between groups at 6 months. Thus although atherectomy was associated with better short-term results, it also was associated with more early complications, increased costs, and no apparent clinical benefit after 6 months. N Engl J Med 1993;329:221-227.  

EPIC
This study showed that the use of a platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa blocker (abciximab) could substantially reduce the need for angioplasty or bypass surgery in patients with a heart attack or angina, and other high-risk patients, offering a more cost-effective approach and a benefit lasting up to 3 years. N Engl J Med 1994;330:956-961.

EPILOG
The follow-up trial to EPIC, EPILOG was intended to identify the best dosages for combination heparin and abciximab therapy. Using lower doses of heparin than in EPIC resulted in the same degree of benefit, with less bleeding than in EPIC. N Engl J Med 1997;336:1689-1696.

GUSTO-I
This "megatrial" of 41,021 patients set the standard for the modern clinical trial. The analysis of four thrombolytic treatments found that a regimen of alteplase (a clot-busting drug) and intravenous heparin (a clot-preventing drug) was superior to the more standard treatment, streptokinase, in reducing mortality after heart attack. The GUSTO-I study showed that the newer therapy could save the lives of thousands of heart-attack victims each year. It has produced more than 100 published manuscripts so far and spawned dozens of influential substudies. N Engl J Med 1993;329:673-682.

GUSTO Angiographic Substudy
The key finding of this 2431-patient GUSTO-I substudy was that blood flow to the heart muscle at 90 minutes mirrors outcomes at 30 days; that is, alteplase resulted in both superior blood flow and superior outcomes compared with other therapies. This finding provided hard evidence that restoring blood flow to the heart muscle more quickly and completely corresponds directly with favorable outcomes. N Engl J Med 1993;329:1615-1622.

GUSTO-IIa and –IIb
GUSTO-II compared recombinant hirudin versus heparin in acute coronary syndromes. GUSTO-IIa was stopped after given hirudin had a higher rate of hemorrhagic stroke, but GUSTO-IIb continued the study at a lower dose of hirudin. This dose of hirudin was found to reduce rates of repeat heart attack. In addition, GUSTO-IIa highlighted the need to have large numbers of patients in a trial: because hemorrhagic stroke occurs very rarely, only a trial of this size would have captured enough events to detect this potential problem. GUSTO-IIb was at the time the largest trial to date in non-ST elevation acute coronary syndromes. GUSTO-IIa: Circulation 1994;90:1631-1637. GUSTO-IIb: N Engl J Med 1996;335:775-782.

GUSTO-II Angioplasty Substudy
In this substudy, angioplasty was found to be superior to alteplase in reducing the rates of death, heart attack and stroke, and stroke at 30 days, although this difference had diminished by 6 months. This study helped establish angioplasty as an acceptable treatment alternative to clot-busting therapy alone. N Engl J Med 1997:336:1621-1628.

GUSTO-III
The third GUSTO trial was the first Phase III trial to evaluate reteplase versus alteplase, two clot-busting drugs. It enrolled 15,060 patients with heart attack. Reteplase was associated with slightly higher rates of mortality and bleeding at 30 days. Designed as a superiority trial, GUSTO-III raised the question of how to define equivalence in a clinical trial. N Engl J Med 1997;337:1118-1123.

Hypericum
This study randomized 340 people with major depressive disorder to receive Hypericum perforatum (St. John's wort) , sertraline (Zoloft), or placebo for 8 weeks. Neither patients nor physicians knew which treatment had been assigned. At 8 weeks, the depression scores among people given Hypericum or sertraline did not differ significnatly from those of patients given placebo, nor did the rate of "full response." Sertraline did show superiority over placebo on the Clinical Global Impressions scale, a secondary measure in this study. This study failed to support the efficacy of this popular supplement in moderately severe major depression. JAMA. 2002;287:1807-1814.

IMPACT-II
A study of 4010 patients who underwent procedures for unstable angina, IMPACT-II found that the platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa blocker eptifibatide was associated with fewer outcome events than placebo when used with aspirin and heparin. IMPACT-II also highlighted the importance of monitoring therapy, when it was found that platelet testing in the lab overestimated the drug's effectiveness, leading to underdosing. Circulation 1995;91:2151-2157.

MAGIC
This study compared magnesium and placebo in 156 patients who were in cardiac arrest. This was the first clinical trial of any standard advanced life-support drug in humans. Previous guidelines had been based only on retrospective case reports. MAGIC also was the first trial to enroll patients who were actually in cardiac arrest, an innovation made possible by "waived consent" in accordance with FDA guidelines. Lancet 1997;350:1272-1276.

OPTIME CHF
This was the first large clinical trial in acute heart failure, which kills as many people as heart attacks. It compared early interventional treatment with milrinone, an intravenous drug, versus placebo in addition to standard care among 1005 patients hospitalized for worsening, severe congestive heart failure. The main outcome measure was the reduction in the total number of days hospitalized for cardiovascular events within 60 days after therapy. Although patients did not appear to benefit from milrinone treatment overall, those with nonischemic cardiomyopathy and those with low sodium levels did show some benefit. JAMA 2002;287:1541-1547.

PURSUIT
This study in 10,948 patients proved the benefits of eptifibatide in the treatment of certain acute coronary syndromes. PURSUIT was an excellent example of the “Large, Simple Trial” concept, enrolling geographically dispersed patients with a wide variety of symptoms, allowing useful comparisons of patient characteristics and practice patterns. N Engl J Med 1998;339:436-443.

SADHART
This study was the first to evaluate the effects of 24 weeks of sertraline (Zoloft) or placebo treatment for major depressive disorder in 369 patients with unstable angina or recent heart attack, which can occur in up to 25% of such patients. Sertraline had no significant effects on ejection fraction, a measure of how well the heart is pumping blood, or on heart beat. Severe cardiovascular events were much more uncommon with sertraline (14.5%) than with placebo (22.4%). Among patients with previous depression and those with severe current depression, sertraline was associated with much greater improvement on both depression scores. Thus sertraline appeared to be a safe, effective treatment for recurrent depression in patients with recent heart attack or unstable angina and without other life-threatening medical conditions. JAMA 2002;288:701-709 (erratum in JAMA 2002;288:1720).

SCD-HeFT
The Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure Trial (SCD-HeFT) found that single-chamber implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) reduced the rate of sudden death within 5 years by 23% compared with a placebo or amiodarone, a drug that corrects abnormal heart rhythms. A cost-effectiveness analysis was incorporated into the design of the SCH-HeFT study, and found that the less-costly ICD devices represent a good value for most patients who need them. N Engl J Med 2005;352:225-237.

SYMPHONY
SYMPHONY tested two doses of sibrafiban, an oral platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitor, against aspirin to prevent future cardiac events in 9233 patients with acute coronary syndromes. The primary endpoint — the composite of death, nonfatal heart attack, or severe recurrent ischemia at 90 days — did not differ significantly among the groups, but major bleeding was more frequent with high-dose sibrafiban than with aspirin or low-dose sibrafiban. Lancet 2000;335:337-345.

SYNERGY
This trial of two anticoagulants randomized 10,027 patients with high-risk acute coronary syndromes to receive subcutaneous enoxaparin every 12 hours or intravenous heparin, until symptoms resolved or the patient underwent a coronary revascularization procedure. Enoxaparin was neither superior nor inferior compared with intravenous heparin—14% of patients given enoxaparin died or had a heart attack by 30 days, as did 14.5% of those given heparin. Similar proportions of patients had a procedure to increase coronary blood flow, but bleeding was more common among patients given enoxaparin. Among patients who had not received anticoagulant therapy before enrollment, however, outcomes were better and bleeding was reduced with enoxaparin versus heparin treatment. JAMA 2004;292:45-54.

VALIANT
This was the largest trial among survivors of acute myocardial infarction (MI), enrolling 14,808 patients at 931 centers in 24 countries. The study randomly assigned these patients—who had had an MI within 10 days previously and who also had heart failure or pumping difficulty—to receive valsartan (an angiotensin II receptor blocker, or ARB), captopril (an angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitor, or ACEI), or their combination. There was a unique, 2-stage plan to analyze the primary endpoint, all-cause mortality: 1) the superiority of valsartan vs. captopril and combination treatment vs. captopril, and, if no superiority was evident, 2) the noninferiority of valsartan vs. captopril. Over 2 years, 19.9% of patients in the valsartan group died, as did 19.5% of patients in the captopril group and 19.3% of patients in the combination group, differences that were not statistically significant. Valsartan treatment was shown to be noninferior to captopril with regard to mortality and a composite of fatal and nonfatal cardiovascular events. N Engl J Med 2003;349:1893-1906.


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