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Ivabradine Doesn’t Prevent Myocardial Injury in Surgery Patients

by Dr. Michael Lee – Health Editor

Ivabradine Shows No Benefit in Preventing ‌Heart ‌Injury ‍During noncardiac Surgery,Trial‌ Finds

Krakow,Poland ⁣- A large,randomized clinical⁤ trial has⁣ found⁢ that ivabradine,a medication used to slow heart rate,does not reduce ⁣the risk of myocardial injury after⁢ noncardiac⁣ surgery,even in patients with existing heart​ disease or risk factors. The‍ PREVENT-MINS trial, halted early due to futility, challenges the hypothesis ‌that simply lowering heart rate during surgery automatically ⁢protects the heart.

The study, conducted at ⁢26 hospitals in ​Poland, involved 2,101 patients aged 45 and ⁣older undergoing noncardiac surgery who either ⁤had established atherosclerotic ⁣disease (coronary artery ​disease, peripheral artery disease, or prior stroke) or significant risk‌ factors‌ like ​diabetes, hypertension, or‌ age over 70. Participants were‍ randomly assigned‌ to receive either ivabradine (5mg twice daily for up to 7 days, starting an hour before surgery) or a placebo.

Researchers tracked the incidence of myocardial injury after⁤ noncardiac surgery​ (MINS) within 30 days of randomization. Results revealed MINS occurred in 17.0% of the ivabradine group compared to 15.1% in​ the placebo group – a statistically non-significant difference (relative​ risk ‍ [RR] ‌ 1.12; 95% confidence interval [CI] ⁣0.92 to 1.37; p=0.25).

Interestingly,a subgroup ​analysis​ revealed⁢ a potential increased risk of⁣ MINS among patients with a prior history of coronary‍ artery disease (RR 1.49; 95%‌ CI 1.03 to 2.16), while no such increase was observed in those without a⁤ history of the condition (RR 0.98; 95% CI 0.78 to 1.24).

While ivabradine did successfully lower intraoperative heart rate by ⁢an⁢ average of 3.2 beats per minute compared to placebo, there was⁤ no difference in blood pressure.‍ ​ the ​drug was also associated ​with a ‌higher incidence of clinically important bradycardia (RR 1.18; 95% CI 1.00 to 1.40).

The trial ⁤was originally designed to enroll around 2,500 ​patients, ​but ⁤the self-reliant Data Monitoring Committee recommended ⁢early⁢ termination in March 2025 after an interim analysis indicated futility.

“Ivabradine did‍ not reduce the ⁤risk of ⁢MINS in‍ patients undergoing noncardiac⁣ surgery,” stated Professor ‍Wojciech Szczeklik, ⁢Principal Investigator⁤ from Jagiellonian University ⁣Medical College, Krakow,‍ Poland. ⁤”Heart-rate lowering was modest and the possible higher MINS ‍incidence in patients with known coronary​ artery disease is contrary to ⁢our original hypothesis. Further research is needed to establish a ⁤method to‍ safely control the heart’s stress associated with noncardiac surgery.”

The rationale behind the study stemmed from the⁣ understanding that increased ‍heart rate‌ during surgery can elevate myocardial oxygen ‌consumption, potentially leading to a⁤ supply-demand‍ imbalance and heart⁢ injury. ⁢Beta-blockers have been used to mitigate this risk, but carry their own ‍potential complications. Ivabradine was investigated as a potentially safer alternative due to its more selective heart-rate lowering effect. However, the PREVENT-MINS ⁢trial suggests that simply slowing the heart isn’t⁣ enough to prevent MINS in this ⁤patient population.Source: European Society of Cardiology ⁣(ESC) – ⁢ https://www.escardio.org/The-ESC/press-Office/Press-releases/Ivabradine-did-not-reduce-the-occurrence-of-myocardial-injury-after-noncardiac-surgery

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