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Diovan
Clinical Pharmacology
Diovan
The modest favorable trend in the group receiving an ACE inhibitor was largely driven by the patients receiving less than the recommended dose of ACE inhibitor. Thus, there is little evidence of further clinical benefit when valsartan is added to an adequate dose of ACE inhibitor.
Secondary end points in the subgroup not receiving ACE inhibitors were as follows.
| Placebo (N=181) |
Valsartan (N=185) |
Hazard Ratio (95% CI) |
|
| Components of HF morbidity | |||
| All-cause mortality | 49 (27.1%) | 32 (17.3%) | 0.59 (0.37, 0.91) |
| Sudden death with resuscitation | 2 (1.1%) | 1 (0.5%) | 0.47 (0.04, 5.20) |
| CHF therapy | 1 (0.6%) | 0 (0.0%) | - |
| CHF hospitalization | 48 (26.5%) | 24 (13.0%) | 0.43 (0.27, 0.71) |
| Cardiovascular mortality | 40 (22.1%) | 29 (15.7%) | 0.65 (0.40, 1.05) |
| Non-fatal morbidity | 49 (27.1%) | 24 (13.0%) | 0.42 (0.26, 0.69) |
In patients not receiving an ACE inhibitor, valsartan-treated patients had an increase in ejection fraction and reduction in left ventricular internal diastolic diameter (LVIDD).
Effects were generally consistent across subgroups defined by age and gender for the population of patients not receiving an ACE inhibitor. The number of black patients was small and does not permit a meaningful assessment in this subset of patients.
Post-Myocardial Infarction
The VALsartan In Acute myocardial iNfarcTion trial (VALIANT) was a randomized, controlled, multinational, double-blind study in 14,703 patients with acute myocardial infarction and either heart failure (signs, symptoms or radiological evidence) or left ventricular systolic dysfunction (ejection fraction ≥40% by radionuclide ventriculography or ≥35% by echocardiography or ventricular contrast angiography). Patients were randomized within 12 hours to 10 days after the onset of myocardial infarction symptoms to one of three treatment groups: valsartan (titrated from 20 or 40 mg twice daily to the highest tolerated dose up to a maximum of 160 mg twice daily), the ACE inhibitor, captopril (titrated from 6.25 mg three times daily to the highest tolerated dose up to a maximum of 50 mg three times daily), or the combination of valsartan plus captopril. In the combination group, the dose of valsartan was titrated from 20 mg twice daily to the highest tolerated dose up to a maximum of 80 mg twice daily; the dose of captopril was the same as for monotherapy. The population studied was 69% male, 94% Caucasian, and 53% were 65 years of age or older. Baseline therapy included aspirin (91%), beta-blockers (70%), ACE inhibitors (40%), thrombolytics (35%) and statins (34%). The mean treatment duration was two years. The mean daily dose of Diovan in the monotherapy group was 217 mg.
The primary endpoint was time to all-cause mortality. Secondary endpoints included (1) time to cardiovascular (CV) mortality, and (2) time to the first event of cardiovascular mortality, reinfarction, or hospitalization for heart failure. The results are summarized in the table below:
| Valsartan vs. Captopril (N=4,909) (N=4,909) | Valsartan + Captopril vs. Captopril (N=4,885) (N=4,909) | |||||
| No. of Deaths Valsartan /Captopril |
Hazard Ratio CI |
p- value |
No. of Deaths Comb /Captopril | Hazard Ratio CI | p-value | |
| All-cause mortality |
979 (19.9%) /958 (19.5%) |
1.001 (0.902, 1.111) |
0.98 | 941 (19.3%) /958 (19.5%) |
0.984 (0.886, 1.093) |
0.73 |
| CV mortality | 827 (16.8%) /830 (16.9%) |
0.976 (0.875, 1.090) |
||||
| CV mortality, hospitalization for HF, and recurrent non-fatal MI | 1,529 (31.1%) /1,567 (31.9%) |
0.955 (0.881, 1.035) |
||||
Generic Name: Valsartan
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