Bruce Sussex
Memorial University of Newfoundland
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Circulation | 1994
M G St John Sutton; Marc A. Pfeffer; Theodore Plappert; Jean-Lucien Rouleau; Lemuel A. Moyé; Gilles R. Dagenais; Gervasio A. Lamas; Marc Klein; Bruce Sussex; Steven A. Goldman
BACKGROUND Left ventricular enlargement after myocardial infarction increases the likelihood of an adverse outcome. In an echocardiographic substudy of the Survival and Ventricular Enlargement (SAVE) Trial, we assessed whether captopril would attenuate progressive left ventricular enlargement in patients with left ventricular dysfunction after acute myocardial infarction and, if so, whether this would be associated with improved clinical outcome. METHODS AND RESULTS Two-dimensional transthoracic echocardiograms were obtained in 512 patients at a mean of 11.1 +/- 3.2 days after infarction and were repeated at 1 year in 420 survivors. Left ventricular size was assessed as left ventricular cavity areas at end diastole and end systole and left ventricular function as percent change in cavity area from end diastole to end systole. Patients were randomly assigned to placebo or captopril, and the incidence of adverse cardiovascular events consisting of cardiovascular death, heart failure requiring either hospitalization or open-label angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor therapy, and recurrent infarction were determined over a follow-up period averaging 3.0 +/- 0.6 years. Irrespective of treatment assignment, baseline left ventricular systolic area and percent change in area were strong predictors of cardiovascular mortality and adverse cardiovascular events. At 1 year, left ventricular end-diastolic and end-systolic areas were larger in the placebo than in the captopril group (P = .038, P = .015, respectively), and percent change in cavity area was greater in the captopril group (P = .005). One hundred eleven of the 420 1-year survivors with 1-year echo measurements (26.4%) experienced a major adverse cardiovascular event, and these patients had more than a threefold greater increase in left ventricular cavity areas than those with an uncomplicated course. Sixty-nine patients with adverse cardiovascular events were in the placebo group compared with 42 patients in the captopril-treated group (a risk reduction of 35%, P = .010). CONCLUSIONS Two-dimensional echocardiography provides important and independent prognostic information in patients after infarction. Left ventricular enlargement and function after infarction are associated with the development of adverse cardiac events. Attenuation of ventricular enlargement with captopril in these patients was associated with a reduction in adverse events. This study demonstrates the linkage between attenuation of left ventricular enlargement by captopril after infarction and improved clinical outcome.
Circulation | 1997
Martin St. John Sutton; Marc A. Pfeffer; Lemuel A. Moyé; Ted Plappert; Jean L. Rouleau; Gervasio A. Lamas; Jacques R. Rouleau; John O. Parker; Malcolm Arnold; Bruce Sussex; Eugene Braunwald
BACKGROUND We quantified cardiovascular death and/or left ventricular (LV) dilatation in patients from the SAVE trial to determine whether dilatation continued beyond 1 year, whether ACE inhibitor therapy attenuated late LV dilatation, and whether any baseline descriptors predicted late dilatation. METHODS AND RESULTS Two-dimensional echocardiograms were obtained in 512 patients at 11+/-3 days and 1 and 2 years postinfarction to assess LV size, percentage of the LV that was akinetic/dyskinetic (%AD), and LV shape index. LV function was assessed by radionuclide ejection fraction. Two hundred sixty-three patients (51.4%) sustained cardiovascular death and/or LV diastolic dilatation; 279 (54.5%) had cardiovascular death and/or systolic dilatation. In 373 patients with serial echocardiograms, LV end-diastolic and end-systolic sizes increased progressively from baseline to 2 years (both P<.01). More patients with LV dilatation had a decrease in ejection fraction: 24.8% versus 6.8% (P<.001) (diastole) and 25.7% versus 5.3% (P<.001) (systole). Captopril attenuated diastolic LV dilatation at 2 years (P=.048), but this effect was carried over from the first year of therapy because changes in LV size with captopril beyond 1 year were similar to those with placebo. Predictors of cardiovascular death and/or dilatation were age (P=.023), prior infarction (P<.001), lower ejection fraction (P<.001), angina (P=.007), heart failure (P=.002), LV size (P<.001), and infarct size (%AD) (P<.001). CONCLUSIONS Cardiovascular death and/or LV dilatation occurred in >50% of patients by 2 years. LV dilatation is progressive, associated with chamber distortion and deteriorating function that is unaffected by captopril beyond 1 year.
Circulation | 2000
Frank M. Sacks; Petar Alaupovic; Lemuel A. Moyé; Thomas G. Cole; Bruce Sussex; Meir J. Stampfer; Marc A. Pfeffer; Eugene Braunwald
BackgroundPlasma triglyceride concentration has been an inconsistent independent risk factor for coronary heart disease, perhaps because of the metabolic heterogeneity among VLDL particles, the main carriers of triglycerides in plasma. Methods and ResultsWe conducted a prospective, nested case-control study in the Cholesterol and Recurrent Events (CARE) trial, a randomized placebo-controlled trial of pravastatin in 4159 patients with myocardial infarction and average LDL concentrations at baseline (115 to 174 mg/dL, mean 139 mg/dL). Baseline concentrations of VLDL–apolipoprotein (apo) B (the VLDL particle concentration), VLDL lipids, and apoCIII and apoE in VLDL+LDL and in HDL were compared in patients who had either a myocardial infarction or coronary death (cases, n=418) with those in patients who did not have a cardiovascular event (control subjects, n=370) in 5 years of follow-up. VLDL-cholesterol, VLDL-triglyceride, VLDL-apoB, apoCIII and apoE in VLDL+LDL and apoE in HDL were all interrelated, and each was a univariate predictor of subsequent coronary events. The significant independent predictors were VLDL-apoB (relative risk [RR] 3.2 for highest to lowest quintiles, P =0.04), apoCIII in VLDL+LDL (RR 2.3, P =0.04), and apoE in HDL (RR 1.8, P =0.02). Plasma triglycerides, a univariate predictor of coronary events (RR 1.6, P =0.03), was not related to coronary events (RR 1.3, P =0.6) when apoCIII in VLDL+LDL was included in the model, whereas apoCIII remained significant. Adjustment for LDL- and HDL-cholesterol did not affect these results. ConclusionsThe plasma concentrations of VLDL particles and apoCIII in VLDL and LDL are more specific measures of coronary heart disease risk than plasma triglycerides perhaps because their known metabolic properties link them more closely to atherosclerosis.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1993
Jean L. Rouleau; Lemuel A. Moyé; Marc A. Pfeffer; J. Malcolm O. Arnold; Victoria Bernstein; Thomas E. Cuddy; Gilles R. Dagenais; Edward M. Geltman; Steven Goldman; David J. Gordon; Peggy Hamm; Marc Klein; Gervasio A. Lamas; John McCans; Patricia McEwan; Francis J. Menapace; John O. Parker; Francois Sestier; Bruce Sussex; Eugene Braunwald
BACKGROUND There are major differences in the organization of the health care systems in Canada and the United States. We hypothesized that these differences may be accompanied by differences in patient care. METHODS To test our hypothesis, we compared the treatment patterns for patients with acute myocardial infarction in 19 Canadian and 93 United States hospitals participating in the Survival and Ventricular Enlargement (SAVE) study, which tested the effectiveness of captopril in this population of patients after a myocardial infarction. RESULTS In Canada, 51 percent of the patients admitted to a participating coronary care unit had acute myocardial infarctions, as compared with only 35 percent in the United States (P < 0.001). Despite the similar clinical characteristics of the 1573 U.S. patients and 658 Canadian patients participating in the study, coronary arteriography was more commonly performed in the United States than in Canada (in 68 percent vs. 35 percent, P < 0.001), as were revascularization procedures before randomization (31 percent vs. 12 percent, P < 0.001). During an average follow-up of 42 months, these procedures were also performed more commonly in the United States than in Canada. These differences were not associated with any apparent difference in mortality (22 percent in Canada and 23 percent in the United States) or rate of reinfarction (14 percent in Canada and 13 percent in the United States), but there was a higher incidence of activity-limiting angina in Canada than in the United States (33 percent vs. 27 percent, P < 0.007). CONCLUSIONS The threshold for the admission of patients to a coronary care unit or for the use of invasive diagnostic and therapeutic interventions in the early and late periods after an infarction is higher in Canada than in the United States. This is not associated with any apparent difference in the rate of reinfarction or survival, but is associated with a higher frequency of activity-limiting angina.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1994
Jean L. Rouleau; Milton Packer; Lemuel A. Moyé; Jacques de Champlain; Daniel G. Bichet; Marc Klein; Jacques R. Rouleau; Bruce Sussex; J. Malcolm O. Arnold; Francois Sestier; John O. Parker; Patricia McEwan; Victoria Bernstein; T. Edward Cuddy; Gervasio A. Lamas; Stephen S. Gottlieb; John McCans; Claude Nadeau; François Delage; Chuan Chuan C Wun; Marc A. Pfeffer
OBJECTIVES This study attempted to evaluate whether neurohumoral activation at the time of hospital discharge in postinfarction patients helps to predict long-term prognosis and whether long-term therapy with the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor captopril modifies this relation. BACKGROUND Neurohumoral activation persists at the time of hospital discharge in a large number of postinfarction patients. The Survival and Ventricular Enlargement (SAVE) study demonstrated that the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor captopril improves survival and decreases the development of severe heart failure in patients with left ventricular dysfunction (left ventricular ejection fraction < or = 40%) but no overt postinfarction heart failure. METHODS In 534 patients in the SAVE study, plasma neurohormone levels were measured a mean of 12 days after infarction. Patients were then randomized to receive captopril or placebo and were followed up for a mean (+/- SD) of 38 +/- 6 months (range 24 to 55). The association between activation of plasma neurohormones at baseline and subsequent cardiovascular mortality or the development of heart failure was assessed with and without adjustment for other important prognostic factors. RESULTS By univariate analysis, activation of plasma renin activity and aldosterone, norepinephrine, atrial natriuretic peptide and arginine vasopressin levels were related to subsequent cardiovascular events, whereas epinephrine and dopamine levels were not. By multivariate analysis, only plasma renin activity (relative risk 1.6, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.0 to 2.5) and atrial natriuretic peptide (relative risk 2.2, 95% CI 1.3 to 3.8) were independently predictive of cardiovascular mortality, whereas the other neurohormones were not. Only plasma renin activity and aldosterone, atrial natriuretic peptide and arginine vasopressin were independent predictors of the combined end points of cardiovascular mortality, development of severe heart failure or recurrent myocardial infarction. Except for 1-year cardiovascular mortality, the use of captopril did not significantly modify these relations. CONCLUSIONS Neurohumoral activation at the time of hospital discharge in postinfarction patients is an independent sign of poor prognosis. This is particularly true for plasma renin activity and atrial natriuretic peptide. Except for 1-year cardiovascular mortality, captopril does not significantly modify these relations.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1996
Jean L. Rouleau; Mario Talajic; Bruce Sussex; Louise Potvin; Wayne Warnica; Richard F. Davies; Martin Gardner; Duncan J. Stewart; Sylvain Plante; Robert Dupuis; Claude Lauzon; John D. Ferguson; Etel Mikes; Vidoslav Balnozan; Pierre Savard
OBJECTIVES This study sought to evaluate the in-hospital and postdischarge mortality of patients with an acute myocardial infarction in the 1990s. BACKGROUND The widespread implementation of therapeutic interventions that modify the natural history of coronary artery disease has led to changes in the profile and survival of patients with an acute myocardial infarction. Although data exist for selected subsets of patients with an acute myocardial infarction, at this time there is little recent prospective information on all patients presenting with an acute myocardial infarction, particularly for survival after hospital discharge. METHODS All patients < or = 75 years old presenting with an acute myocardial infarction between July 1, 1990 and June 30, 1992 at nine Canadian hospitals were prospectively evaluated and followed up for 1 year. From November 1991, patients of all ages were included. In two centers, recruitment continued until December 31, 1992. A total of 3,178 patients were recruited. RESULTS The in-hospital mortality rate of patients < or = 75 years old was 8.4%, and that at 1 year after hospital discharge was 5.3%. For patients of all ages recruited after November 1, 1991, the in-hospital mortality rate was 9.9% and 7.1% for 1 year after hospital discharge. For patients < or = 75 years old, age carried an independent in-hospital but no post discharge risk. Female patients had a twofold greater risk of dying in hospital. After hospital discharge, only 1.7% of patients < or = 75 years old and 1.9% of patients of all ages died of a presumed arrhythmic death. Premature ventricular contractions had no independent prognostic value. The relatively low in-hospital (5.3%) and postdischarge (6.1%) reinfarction rate may have contributed to improved survival. A greater reinfarction rate in patients >75 years old (17.4% vs. 9.6%, p < 0.001) may have contributed to their poorer outcome. CONCLUSIONS One-year mortality after acute myocardial infarction continues to decrease, and changes in the prognostic value of traditional methods of risk stratification have occurred.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1997
Pascal J. Vantrimpont; Jean L. Rouleau; Chuan Chuan Wun; Antonio Ciampi; Marc Klein; Bruce Sussex; J. Malcolm O. Arnold; Lemuel A. Moyé; Marc A. Pfeffer
OBJECTIVES This study assessed whether treatment with a beta-adrenergic blocking agent in addition to the use of the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor captopril decreases cardiovascular mortality and morbidity in patients with asymptomatic left ventricular dysfunction after myocardial infarction (MI) and whether the presence of neurohumoral activation at the time of hospital discharge predicts the effects of beta-blocker treatment in these patients. BACKGROUND Both beta-blockers and ACE inhibitors have been shown to have beneficial effects in patients with left ventricular dysfunction but no overt heart failure after MI. These patients often have persistent neurohumoral activation at the time of hospital discharge, and one would expect that patients with activation of the sympathetic nervous system derive the most benefit from treatment with beta-blockers. However, beta-blockers are underutilized in this high risk group of patients, and it is unknown whether their beneficial effects are additive to those of ACE inhibitors. METHODS We performed a retrospective analysis of data from the Survival and Ventricular Enlargement (SAVE) study and its neurohumoral substudy. The relations between beta-blocker use at the time of randomization and neurohumoral activation and the subsequent development of cardiovascular events were analyzed by use of Cox proportional hazards models controlling for covariates. RESULTS After adjustment for baseline imbalances, beta-blocker use was associated with a significant reduction in risk of cardiovascular death (30%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 12% to 44%) and development of heart failure (21%, 95% CI 3% to 36%), but the reduction in recurrent MI (11%, 95% CI 13% to 31%) was not significant. These reductions were independent of the use of captopril. Beta-blockers were not found to have a greater effect in patients with neurohumoral activation at the time of hospital discharge. CONCLUSIONS The beneficial effects of beta-blocker use at the time of hospital discharge in patients with asymptomatic left ventricular dysfunction after MI appear to be additive to those of captopril and other interventions known to improve prognosis. Neurohumoral activation at the time of hospital discharge fails to identify those patients who will derive the greatest benefit from treatment with beta-blockers.
Canadian Journal of Cardiology | 2013
Robert S. McKelvie; Gordon W. Moe; Justin A. Ezekowitz; George A. Heckman; Jeannine Costigan; Anique Ducharme; Estrellita Estrella-Holder; Nadia Giannetti; Adam Grzeslo; Karen Harkness; Jonathan G. Howlett; Simon Kouz; Kori Leblanc; Elizabeth Mann; Anil Nigam; Eileen O'Meara; Miroslaw Rajda; Brian Steinhart; Elizabeth Swiggum; Vy Van Le; Shelley Zieroth; J. Malcolm O. Arnold; Tom Ashton; Michel D'Astous; Paul Dorian; Haissam Haddad; Debra Isaac; Marie-Hélène Leblanc; Peter Yuk-Fong Liu; V. Rao
The 2012 Canadian Cardiovascular Society Heart Failure (HF) Guidelines Update provides management recommendations for acute and chronic HF. In 2006, the Canadian Cardiovascular Society HF Guidelines committee first published an overview of HF management. Since then, significant additions to and changes in many of these recommendations have become apparent. With this in mind and in response to stakeholder feedback, the Guidelines Committee in 2012 has updated the overview of both acute and chronic heart failure diagnosis and management. The 2012 Update also includes recommendations, values and preferences, and practical tips to assist the medical practitioner manage their patients with HF.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1993
Jean L. Rouleau; Jacques de Champlain; Marc Klein; Daniel G. Bichet; Lemuel A. Moyé; Milton Packer; Gilles R. Dagenais; Bruce Sussex; J. Malcolm O. Arnold; Francois Sestier; John O. Parker; Patricia McEwan; Victoria Bernstein; T. Edward Cuddy; Gervasio A. Lamas; Stephen S. Gottlieb; John McCans; Claude Nadeau; François Delage; Peggy Hamm; Marc A. Pfeffer
OBJECTIVES This study was conducted to evaluate the degree of neurohumoral activation around the time of hospital discharge after myocardial infarction. BACKGROUND Because pharmacologic interventions that block the effects of neurohumoral activation improve the prognosis after infarction, we hypothesized that widespread neurohumoral activation persists in some patients until at least the time of hospital discharge and that the determinants of activation vary from one system to another. METHODS Five hundred nineteen patients in the Survival and Ventricular Enlargement Study (SAVE) had plasma neurohormones measured before randomization at a mean of 12 days after infarction. All patients had left ventricular dysfunction (left ventricular ejection fraction < or = 40%) but no overt heart failure. RESULTS Although all neurohormones except epinephrine were increased compared with values in age-matched control subjects, plasma norepinephrine (301 +/- 193 vs. 222 +/- 87 pg/ml, p < 0.001), renin activity (3.0 +/- 3.7 vs. 1.2 +/- 1.2 ng/ml per h, p < 0.001), arginine vasopressin (1.9 +/- 6.9 vs. 0.7 +/- 0.3 pg/ml, p < 0.001) and atrial natriuretic peptide (75 +/- 75 vs. 21 +/- 9 pg/ml, p < 0.001) values ranged from normal to very high, indicating a wide spectrum of neurohumoral activation. Activation of one system did not correlate with activation of another. The clinical and laboratory variables most closely associated with neurohumoral activation were Killip class, left ventricular ejection fraction, age and use of diuretic drugs. The association between neurohumoral activation and clinical and laboratory variables varied from one neurohormone to another. CONCLUSIONS Neurohumoral activation occurs in a significant proportion of patients at the time of hospital discharge after infarction. Which neurohormone is activated and which clinical and laboratory variables determine this activation vary from one neurohormone to another.
Canadian Journal of Cardiology | 2011
Robert S. McKelvie; Gordon W. Moe; Anson Cheung; Jeannine Costigan; Anique Ducharme; Estrellita Estrella-Holder; Justin A. Ezekowitz; John S. Floras; Nadia Giannetti; Adam Grzeslo; Karen Harkness; George A. Heckman; Jonathan G. Howlett; Simon Kouz; Kori Leblanc; Elizabeth Mann; Eileen O'Meara; Miroslav Rajda; Vivek Rao; Jessica Simon; Elizabeth Swiggum; Shelley Zieroth; J. Malcolm O. Arnold; Tom Ashton; Michel D'Astous; Paul Dorian; Haissam Haddad; Debra Isaac; Marie-Hélène Leblanc; Peter Liu
The 2011 Canadian Cardiovascular Society Heart Failure (HF) Guidelines Focused Update reviews the recently published clinical trials that will potentially impact on management. Also reviewed is the less studied but clinically important area of sleep apnea. Finally, patients with advanced HF represent a group of patients who pose major difficulties to clinicians. Advanced HF therefore is examined from the perspectives of HF complicated by renal failure, the role of palliative care, and the role of mechanical circulatory support (MCS). All of these topics are reviewed from a perspective of practical applications. Important new studies have demonstrated in less symptomatic HF patients that cardiac resynchronization therapy will be of benefit. As well, aldosterone receptor antagonists can be used with benefit in less symptomatic HF patients. The important role of palliative care and the need to address end-of-life issues in advanced HF are emphasized. Physicians need to be aware of the possibility of sleep apnea complicating the course of HF and the role of a sleep study for the proper assessment and management of the conditon. Patients with either acute severe or chronic advanced HF with otherwise good life expectancy should be referred to a cardiac centre capable of providing MCS. Furthermore, patients awaiting heart transplantation who deteriorate or are otherwise not likely to survive until a donor organ is found should be referred for MCS.