Prognosis of patients with stable angina pectoris on antianginal drug therapy.
Antianginal drug treatment reduces symptoms and ischemia but may also
influence the prognosis of patients with stable angina pectoris. The Atenolol
Silent Ischemia Study (ASIST) compared atenolol and placebo treatment (about
140 patient years on each) in patients with mainly silent ischemia and
found less aggravation of angina and a tendency toward fewer cardiac complications
with atenolol treatment. The Total Ischaemic Burden European Trial (TIBET)
compared slow release nifedipine, atenolol, or the combination (about 450
patient years on each) and found no significant differences with regard
to cardiac complications, a nonsignificant trend toward better prognosis
on combined treatment, and more side effects on nifedipine alone compared
with the other treatments. The Angina Prognosis Study in Stockholm (APSIS)
compared metoprolol and verapamil (about 1,400 patient years on each) and
found similar effects on cardiovascular endpoints, tolerability, and psychosocial
variables with the 2 treatments. Hypothesis generating subgroup analyses
in APSIS suggest that treatment effects may differ in hypertensive and
diabetic subgroups. Beneficial effects in primary and secondary prevention,
together with data from ASIST, suggest that beta 1 blockade influences
prognosis favorably. The safety of short acting nifedipine in ischemic
heart disease is questioned, but TIBET data suggest that slow release nifedipine
may be safe. Verapamil has beneficial effects after myocardial infarction
(Danish Verapamil Infarction Trial II) and shows similar efficacy as metoprolol
in the APSIS study. The paucity of placebo data (antianginal treatment
cannot be withheld during long periods of time in symptomatic patients)
precludes firm conclusions regarding effects of drug treatment on prognosis.
It is argued that patients with stable angina pectoris do well on medical
treatment, and that beta 1 blockers, verapamil, and, possibly, slow release
nifedipine may influence their prognosis favorably.