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Cyclosporine before PCI in Patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction.

The New England journal of medicine (2015-09-01)
Thien-Tri Cung, Olivier Morel, Guillaume Cayla, Gilles Rioufol, David Garcia-Dorado, Denis Angoulvant, Eric Bonnefoy-Cudraz, Patrice Guérin, Meier Elbaz, Nicolas Delarche, Pierre Coste, Gerald Vanzetto, Marc Metge, Jean-François Aupetit, Bernard Jouve, Pascal Motreff, Christophe Tron, Jean-Noel Labeque, Philippe Gabriel Steg, Yves Cottin, Grégoire Range, Jérome Clerc, Marc J Claeys, Patrick Coussement, Fabrice Prunier, Frédéric Moulin, Olivier Roth, Loïc Belle, Philippe Dubois, Paul Barragan, Martine Gilard, Christophe Piot, Patrice Colin, Fabien De Poli, Marie-Claude Morice, Omar Ider, Jean-Luc Dubois-Randé, Thierry Unterseeh, Hervé Le Breton, Thierry Béard, Didier Blanchard, Gilles Grollier, Vincent Malquarti, Patrick Staat, Arnaud Sudre, Eskil Elmer, Magnus J Hansson, Cyrille Bergerot, Inesse Boussaha, Claire Jossan, Geneviève Derumeaux, Nathan Mewton, Michel Ovize
ABSTRACT

Experimental and clinical evidence suggests that cyclosporine may attenuate reperfusion injury and reduce myocardial infarct size. We aimed to test whether cyclosporine would improve clinical outcomes and prevent adverse left ventricular remodeling. In a multicenter, double-blind, randomized trial, we assigned 970 patients with an acute anterior ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) who were undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) within 12 hours after symptom onset and who had complete occlusion of the culprit coronary artery to receive a bolus injection of cyclosporine (administered intravenously at a dose of 2.5 mg per kilogram of body weight) or matching placebo before coronary recanalization. The primary outcome was a composite of death from any cause, worsening of heart failure during the initial hospitalization, rehospitalization for heart failure, or adverse left ventricular remodeling at 1 year. Adverse left ventricular remodeling was defined as an increase of 15% or more in the left ventricular end-diastolic volume. A total of 395 patients in the cyclosporine group and 396 in the placebo group received the assigned study drug and had data that could be evaluated for the primary outcome at 1 year. The rate of the primary outcome was 59.0% in the cyclosporine group and 58.1% in the control group (odds ratio, 1.04; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.78 to 1.39; P=0.77). Cyclosporine did not reduce the incidence of the separate clinical components of the primary outcome or other events, including recurrent infarction, unstable angina, and stroke. No significant difference in the safety profile was observed between the two treatment groups. In patients with anterior STEMI who had been referred for primary PCI, intravenous cyclosporine did not result in better clinical outcomes than those with placebo and did not prevent adverse left ventricular remodeling at 1 year. (Funded by the French Ministry of Health and NeuroVive Pharmaceutical; CIRCUS ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01502774; EudraCT number, 2009-013713-99.).

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(±)-CPP, solid