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The European Journal of Heart Failure 8 (2006) 105 – 110 www.elsevier.com/locate/heafai Clinical trials update from the American Heart Association: REPAIR-AMI, ASTAMI, JELIS, MEGA, REVIVE-II, SURVIVE, and PROACTIVE a b Department of Cardiology, University of Hull, Castle Hill Hospital, Cottingham, Kingston-upon-Hull, HU15 5JQ, UK Department of Primary Care and General Practice, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK Received 1 December 2005; accepted 7 December 2005 Abstract This article provides information and a commentary on trials presented at the American Heart Association meeting held in November 2005, relevant to the pathophysiology, prevention and treatment of heart failure. All reports should be considered as preliminary data, as analyses may change in the final publication. In REPAIR-AMI an improvement in ejection fraction was observed in post-MI patients following infusion of bone marrow stem cells. However, the ASTAMI study showed no benefit of stem cell implantation in a similar patient cohort. The JELIS study reported a reduction in major coronary events in patients receiving statins plus fish oil compared to statins alone. MEGA showed that low dose statins in a low risk population reduce the incidence of major cardiovascular events. Two studies of levosimendan in acute heart failure gave conflicting results, in the REVIVE-II study levosimendan was reported to have a superior effect on the composite primary outcome compared to placebo, however, in SURVIVE despite a trend to early benefit with levosimendan, there was no difference in effect on long-term outcome versus dobutamine. The PROACTIVE study showed encouraging results for the use of pioglitazone in post-myocardial infarction patients with concomitant type 2 diabetes. D 2005 European Society of Cardiology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. Keywords: American Heart Association; REPAIR-AMI; ASTAMI; JELIS; MEGA; REVIVE-II; SURVIVE; PROACTIVE 1. REPAIR-AMI (Reinfusion of Enriched Progenitor cells And Infarct Remodelling in Acute Heart Failure) and ASTAMI (Autologous Stem cell Transplantation in Acute Myocardial Infarction) Results of REPAIR-AMI were presented by Volker Schachinger, JW Goethe University, Germany. Results of ASTAMI were presented by Ketil Lunde, Rikhospitalet University Hospital, Norway. Replacing lost cardiac myocytes could make a valuable contribution to the management or prevention of heart failure. Over the last decade attempts have been made to * Corresponding author. Tel.: +44 1482 624086; fax: +44 1482 624085. E-mail address: [email protected] (A.P. Coletta). implant skeletal muscle myoblasts or pluripotential stem cells into damaged or failing myocardium. Currently, it is not clear whether such interventions are safe or effective. Also, the mechanism of effect is uncertain [1]. Stem cell implantation could encourage new vessel growth, alter the function of existing myocardium, or cells may evolve into functional cardiac myocytes. Accordingly, two welldesigned randomised controlled trials reported at the AHA are welcome. Both studies targeted post myocardial infarction patients. The emerging strategy is to repopulate damaged myocardium. Intervention that is too early may fail due to inadequate perfusion or high oxidative and inflammatory stress and if too late may prove ineffective due to the presence of dense organized myocardial scar. However, up to two thirds of dysfunctional segments after a myocardial infarction will reflect stunned, hibernating or partial thickness myocardium and it is possible that intervention 1388-9842/$ - see front matter D 2005 European Society of Cardiology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.ejheart.2005.12.003 Downloaded from http://eurjhf.oxfordjournals.org/ at Pennsylvania State University on March 4, 2014 John G.F. Cleland a, Nick Freemantle b, Alison P. Coletta a,*, Andrew L. Clark a 106 J.G.F. Cleland et al. / The European Journal of Heart Failure 8 (2006) 105 – 110 have the capacity to form muscle cells. Furthermore, BOOST-II randomizing 200 patients with large myocardial infarction and significantly depressed LV function will assess the impact of bone marrow derived cell transfer on long term regional and global LV function and outcome over 3 years. 2. JELIS ( Japan EPA Lipid Intervention Study) and MEGA (Management of Elevated cholesterol in the primary prevention Group of Adult Japanese) Results of JELIS were presented by Mitsuhiro Yokoyama, Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine, Japan. Results from MEGA were presented by Haruo Nakamura, National Defence Medical College, Saitama, Japan. The first two large multicentre outcome trials in cardiovascular disease in Japan were presented at this meeting. The JELIS study included 18,645 hypercholesterolaemic patients, of these, 3664 patients had a previous history of coronary artery disease (CAD) and were classified as ‘‘secondary prevention’’ the remaining 14,981 patients had no history of CAD and were classified as ‘‘primary prevention’’ All patients were receiving low-dose statins and half were randomised to additional treatment with 1800 mg of highly purified eicosapentenoic acid (EPA) daily. The mean duration of follow-up was 4.5 years. The addition of fish oil to low dose statin therapy significantly reduced the incidence of the primary endpoint (primary endpoint outcomes included sudden cardiac death, myocardial infarction, unstable angina, or any procedures to reopen blocked arteries). The beneficial effects of fish oil plus statins were greater in patients in the secondary prevention group. There was no effect on sudden death (Table 1). Previous studies of fish oil supplementation have shown conflicting results [3,4]. It is possible that the results of this study may have been influenced by the high level of fish consumption in the Japanese population compared to western countries. These data continue the fish oil story, however, whether there is a beneficial effect on sudden death in heart failure patients and whether this is due to decreased vascular events or arrhythmias, remains to be established [5]. The MEGA study showed that low dose statins in a low risk population still reduce the incidence of major cardiovascular events. However, the safety and efficacy of statins Table 1 Percentage of patients with endpoint events in the JELIS trial Primary endpoint Sudden cardiac death Statin, n = 9319 Statin plus fish oil, n = 9326 Hazard ratio 3.5% 0.2% 2.8% 0.2% 0.81 (0.69 – 0.95) 1.06 (0.55 – 2.07) Downloaded from http://eurjhf.oxfordjournals.org/ at Pennsylvania State University on March 4, 2014 with stem cells could influence the function of such segments. The REPAIR-AMI study, from Germany and Switzerland, randomly assigned 204 patients to infusion of bone marrow stem cells (estimated 236 million cells) or cell-free supernatant an average of 4 days after a myocardial infarction. Cells were obtained by aspirating, in both groups, 50 ml of bone marrow from the iliac crest. By four months left ventricular ejection fraction had improved in both groups (92% of patients completed follow-up) but the improvement was significantly greater in patients who received stem cells 48% to 54%, compared with 47% to 50% in the placebo group ( p = 0.021). Benefits were most obvious in patients who received the intervention more than 5 days after their myocardial infarction. Clinical events were rare, there were 2 deaths in each group, in the placebo group two patients developed heart failure and 5 patients had a recurrent myocardial infarction, none of these events occurred in the stem-cell group. More patients required revascularisation in the placebo group (28 versus 19). These small differences in the rate of recurrent infarction and revascularisation may have occurred by chance and could have influenced the outcome in terms of ventricular function. In contrast, the ASTAMI study from Norway randomly assigned 100 patients with an anterior myocardial infarction to stem cell implant or not, 5– 8 days after the acute event [2]. Patients were thoroughly investigated including nuclear myocardial perfusion scan, echocardiogram and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. The investigators observed no benefit and indeed CMR suggested that at 6 months, left ventricular ejection fraction had increased more in the control group (+ 1.2% versus + 4.3%; p = 0.05). A recent update of the BOOST study suggested that the beneficial bone marrow transfer post MI is sustained at 18 months, however, there was a further improvement of global LV function in the control group and therefore, the intergroup comparison was no longer significant. Other observational data suggest that cell transplantation may improve left ventricular function even in patients with long-standing heart failure. Whether or not the extent of myocardial scar is an important determinant of this response is uncertain. These trials should mark the end of small, single centre studies. Clearly, the technique is feasible, is not dramatically effective, but does not expose patients to very high risk. Larger (several hundred patients per group), longer-term (3 – 5 years follow-up), multicentre trials looking for evidence of modest benefit and risk are now required. One such trial (MAGIC) is underway using autologous skeletal muscle myoblasts in patients with chronic heart failure who are undergoing coronary bypass and defibrillator implantation, the latter due to the possible increase in risk of sudden arrhythmic death associated with this form of stem cell therapy. Whereas bone marrow stem cells may evolve into many different cells, myoblasts appear only to J.G.F. Cleland et al. / The European Journal of Heart Failure 8 (2006) 105 – 110 in very high risk populations, such as those with heart failure, require further investigation [5,6]. 3. REVIVE-II (Randomised multicentre evaluation of intravenous levosimendan efficacy versus placebo in the short term treatment of decompensated heart failure) and SURVIVE (Survival of patients with acute heart failure in need of intravenous inotropic support trial) deemed improved and 7% fewer worse with levosimendan. Of those assigned to levosimendan 15% required intravenous rescue therapy, mostly diuretics, versus 26% of those assigned to placebo. Plasma concentrations of BNP fell by about 250 pg/ml and duration of hospitalisation was shortened by about 2 days ( p = 0.001), but this was not accompanied by a reduction in mortality. By 90 days, there were 35 deaths on placebo and 45 in the levosimendan group (Fig. 1). There were more reports of hypotension (50% versus 36%) and atrial fibrillation (8% versus 2%) in the levosimendan group compared with the placebo group. Overall these data are promising but not conclusive. The effect on symptoms was modest. The most impressive finding is the reduction in bed-days. Despite a reduction in BNP, usually considered a good prognostic sign, there was a trend to higher mortality, which contrasts with previous studies of levosimendan. Whether reduction of already low arterial pressure, exacerbated by the use of a loading dose, was associated with the trend to increased mortality awaits analysis as does the clinical effect in relation to the use of beta-blockers. The SURVIVE study compared levosimendan and dobutamine in patients who had been admitted to hospital with acute heart failure and a LVEF <30%, who remained breathless at rest despite intravenous diuretics and vasodilators, if they had features of a low cardiac output including oliguria, cool peripheries and low arterial pressure. Patients had to have a systolic blood pressure in the range of 80– 130 mm Hg and serum creatinine < 450 Amol/ L. This was one of the highest risk populations ever enrolled in a study of heart failure. More than one in four patients had died within 6 months despite modern medical therapy, which is higher than in any other study of acute heart failure and similar to the 5-month rate in the CONSENSUS study [11]. Clearly, the needs of patients remain unmet, even by modern therapy. However, potentially many of these deaths were in patients verging on or with cardiogenic shock and therefore beyond rescue with either agent. The primary outcome was all-cause mortality at 180 days, a time far beyond the haemodynamic effects of either agent. This endpoint was based on the concept that a short-term intervention could have long-term effects, rather like thrombolysis or aspirin after a myocardial infarction or antibiotics for pneumonia, and is supported by observations from previous trials, although these had only shown a shortterm mortality gain without long-term catch-up rather than continuing divergence in survival. The design was of a conventional randomised controlled trial, comparing short-term administration of levosimendan and dobutamine using a double-dummy technique. Altogether, 1327 patients were randomised. The mean age was 67 years, 72% were men, 88% had a past history of heart failure, LVEF was 24%, 76% had ischaemic heart disease, mean systolic blood pressure was 116 mm Hg and plasma concentrations of BNP were grossly elevated. Downloaded from http://eurjhf.oxfordjournals.org/ at Pennsylvania State University on March 4, 2014 Results of REVIVE-II were presented by Milton Packer, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Texas, USA. Results of SURVIVE were presented by Alexandre Mebazza, Hopital Lariboisiere, Paris, France. Levosimendan has inotropic and vasodilator properties mediated by calcium-concentration dependent (i.e. operates mainly in systole) calcium sensitisation and opening potassium channels [7,8]. Three modest sized trials have suggested that short-term (6– 24 h) infusion of levosimendan might improve symptoms and reduce subsequent mortality over the following 180 days [7– 9]. REVIVE and SURVIVE were designed to confirm these findings in large prospectively designed studies. The REVIVE-II study compared levosimendan and placebo in patients who had been admitted to hospital with a primary or secondary diagnosis of heart failure and LVEF < 35% if they remained breathless at rest after use of diuretics and vasodilators. The protocol suggested that patients should be enrolled within 48 h of admission but did permit patients to be enrolled after this time. Thus, this was predominantly a study of severe heart failure patients unresponsive to standard therapy, whose needs are obviously not met by current therapy. Patients requiring ventilatory support, with systolic blood pressure <90 mm Hg or serum creatinine > 450 umol/L were excluded. The primary endpoint was a complex composite outcome. Patients who rated themselves as moderately or markedly improved at 6 h, 24 h and 5 days were considered to have improved provided they met no criteria for worsening. This endpoint reflects the desire to obtain prompt and sustained benefit. Worsening included death, patient self reported moderate or severe deterioration at any time-point or worsening symptoms at any time or persistent severe symptoms after 24 h requiring rescue therapy for instance with intravenous diuretic, vasodilator or inotropic agents. Other patients were considered unchanged. These criteria had been modified in light of a previous pilot trial (REVIVE-I). The mean age of the 600 patients randomised was 63 years and 72% were men. Mean LVEF was 23%, over 70% were oedematous, 68% had rales and mean systolic blood pressure was 116 mm Hg. ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers, digoxin and spironolactone were prescribed to 85%, 78%, 60% and 41% of patients, respectively.The primary endpoint was achieved ( p = 0.015). However, the net benefit in absolute terms was modest, as about 6% more patients were 107 108 J.G.F. Cleland et al. / The European Journal of Heart Failure 8 (2006) 105 – 110 a 0.455 (0.254, 0.834) CASINO* 0.734 (0.202, 2.524) REVIVE-1 0.225 (0.004, 2.416) REVIVE-II 1.726 (0.786, 3.948) Exact Fixed Effects 0.721 (0.469, 1.113) Random Effects 0.718 (0.315, 1.637) 0.001 0.01 0.1 0.2 0.5 1 2 5 Heterogeneity = 9.579502 (df = 3) P = 0.0225 b RUSSLAN 0.54 (0.32, 0.90) CASINO* 0.53 (0.24, 1.14) REVIVE-1 0.75 (0.14, 3.74) REVIVE-II 1.35 (0.82, 2.23) Exact Fixed Effects 0.79 (0.58, 1.08) Random Effects 0.75 (0.43, 1.30) 0.1 0.2 0.5 1 2 5 Heterogeneity = 9.868768 (df = 3) P = 0.0197 Fig. 1. (a) Meta-analysis (odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals) of levosimendan versus placebo on short term mortality—pooled fixed and random effects [9 – 11]. *Numbers recalculated from percentages, data not verified. (b) Meta-analysis (odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals) of levosimendan versus placebo on long-term mortality—pooled fixed and random effects [9 – 11]. *Numbers recalculated from percentages, data not verified. There was a trend to early benefit with levosimendan that was not sustained beyond the period of haemodynamic efficacy of the drug (Table 2). Levosimendan reduced plasma concentrations of BNP to a greater extent than dobutamine and this effect was sustained for 5 days. Subgroup analysis showed heterogeneity in outcome between countries. Levosimendan was associated with a substantial reduction in the relative (and modest reduction in absolute) risk of death during the first 30 days compared to dobutamine. Patients were more likely to experience atrial fibrillation (9.1% versus 6.1%; p < 0.05) and less likely to experience worsening heart failure (12.3% versus 17%; p < 0.02) on levosimendan compared to dobutamine. There were no differences in mean serum creatinine or total hypotensive episodes but these outcomes require more detailed analysis. Previous studies comparing levosimendan and dobutamine recruited mainly patients with severe chronic heart failure and this group appeared to gain greater benefit in SURVIVE, possibly because they were more likely to be receiving a beta-blocker, which interacted favourably with levosimendan compared to dobutamine in a previous study of subacute heart failure [12] (Fig. 2). Most studies of chronic heart failure require a standard background therapy. Trials of acute heart failure are conducted on top of very variable background therapy for which there is little evidence of benefit for many components. SURVIVE showed evidence of regional heterogene- Downloaded from http://eurjhf.oxfordjournals.org/ at Pennsylvania State University on March 4, 2014 RUSSLAN J.G.F. Cleland et al. / The European Journal of Heart Failure 8 (2006) 105 – 110 a LIDO 0.41 (0.15, 1.07) CASINO* 0.43 (0.13, 1.27) SURVIVE 0.81 (0.51, 1.26) Exact Fixed Effects 0.66 (0.45, 0.96) Random Effects 0.62 (0.39, 0.99) 0.2 0.5 1 2 Heterogeneity = 2.669791 (df = 2) P = 0.2632 b LIDO 0.58 (0.30, 1.10) CASINO* 0.26 (0.12, 0.55) SURVIVE 0.91 (0.71, 1.17) Exact Fixed Effects 0.75 (0.60, 0.93) Random Effects 0.55 (0.27, 1.11) 0.1 0.2 0.5 1 2 Heterogeneity = 12.570649 (df = 2) P = 0.0019 Fig. 2. (a) Meta-analysis (odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals) of levosimendan versus dobutamine on short-term mortality—pooled fixed and random effects [9,13]. *Numbers recalculated from percentages, data not verified. (b) Meta-analysis (odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals) of levosimendan versus dobutamine on long-term mortality—pooled fixed and random effects [9,13]. *Numbers recalculated from percentages, data not verified. ity in effect suggesting that differences in clinical practice may have influenced outcome. Only including patients and centres that adhere to an agreed evidence-based care pathway will improve the ability of new interventions and new trials to show benefit. Clearly, some patients are so sick that no intervention can save them, whilst others will survive without any intervention. Identifying patients at Table 2 Outcome data from SURVIVE Intervention Levosimendan (n = 664) Dobutamine (n = 663) Hazard ratio Deaths 0–5 days 6 – 30 days 30 – 180 days Total 29 40 0.72 (0.55 – 1.16) 50 41 94 94 173 185 0.91 (0.74 – 1.13) high but modifiable risk is one of the most important tasks of medicine and medical research. Levosimendan is a vasodilator. Patients with a baseline systolic arterial pressure of 80 mm Hg or lower could be enrolled in REVIVE/SURVIVE. This agent is not suitable for the treatment of hypotension or cardiogenic shock on the basis of current evidence. Recruitment of patients with inappropriately low arterial pressure that fell further on levosimendan resulting in problems with vital organ perfusion may well have led to a loss of any advantage from levosimendan compared to dobutamine and a neutral outcome. Also, it should be noted that studies of dobutamine indicating an excess mortality are derived mainly from repetitive dosing in patients with chronic severe heart failure and not from studies of acute heart failure [13]. The clinical significance of a short-term mortality gain, assuming the observed subgroup analysis is real, that cannot Downloaded from http://eurjhf.oxfordjournals.org/ at Pennsylvania State University on March 4, 2014 0.1 109 110 J.G.F. Cleland et al. / The European Journal of Heart Failure 8 (2006) 105 – 110 4. PROACTIVE: (PROspective pioglitAzone Clinical Trial In macro Vascular Events) Results presented by Erland Erdmann, University of Koeln, Germany. Glitazones are contra-indicated in patients with heart failure. There is considerable uncertainty about how to manage diabetes in patients with heart failure or in the postinfarction setting. The PROACTIVE study randomised 5238 patients with type 2 diabetes (mean duration 8 years in the post-myocardial infarction cohort) and macrovascular disease to placebo or pioglitazone (target dose 45 mg/day). Patients were followed for 2.85 years [14]. Patients with a previous (> 6 months) myocardial infarction (n = 2445; 47% of total) constituted a large subgroup of patients at increased risk of LVSD and heart failure. Piogiltazone improved the cardiovascular risk profile by reducing triglycerides and LDL cholesterol and increasing in HDL cholesterol. This was associated with a reduced risk of recurrent coronary vascular events and a trend to lower cardiac mortality (about 1.5% absolute risk per year reduced by about 17% in relative terms). There was a slight increase in the risk of worsening oedema and a diagnosis of heart failure (2.7% absolute increase) but this did not lead to an increase in mortality for heart failure or all-cause. These data are encouraging and the cardiovascular benefit similar in relative terms to that from statins. Data investigating safety, efficacy and tolerability both in the acute post-infarction setting and in heart failure would be welcome. References [1] Limbourg FP, Ringes-Lichtenberg S, Schaefer A, et al. Haematopoietic stem cells improve cardiac function after infarction without permanent cardiac engraftment. Eur J Heart Fail 2005;7:722 – 9. [2] Lunde K, Solheim S, Aakhus S, et al. Autologous stem cell transplantation in acute myocardial infarction: the ASTAMI randomised controlled trial. Intracoronary transplantation of autologous mononuclear bone marrow cells, study design and safety aspects. Scand Cardiovasc J 2005;39:150 – 8. [3] Cleland JGF, Coletta AP, Lammiman M, et al. Clinical trials update from the European Society of Cardiology Heart Failure meeting: CARE-HF extension study, ESSENTIAL, CIBIS-III, S-ICD, ISSUE2, STRIDE-2, SOFA, IMAGINE, PREAMI, SIRIUS-II and ACTIVE. Eur J Heart Fail 2005;7:1070 – 5. [4] Cleland JGF, Freemantle N, Kaye G, et al. Clinical trials update from the American College of cardiology meeting V-3 fatty acids and arrhythmia risk in patients with an implantable defibrillator, ACTIV in CHF, VALIANT, the Hanover autologous bone marrow transplantation study, SPORTIF V, ORBIT and PAD and DEFINITE. Eur J Heart Fail 2004;6:109 – 15. [5] Tavazzi L, Tognoni G, Franzosi MG, et al. Rationale and design of the GISSI heart failure trial: a large trial to assess the effects of n 3 polyunsaturated fatty acids and rosuvastatin in symptomatic congestive heart failure. Eur J Heart Fail 2004;6:635 – 41. [6] Kjekshus J, Dunselman P, Blideskog M, et al. A statin in the treatment of heart failure? Controlled rosuvastatin multinational study in heart failure (CORONA): study design and baseline characteristics. Eur J Heart Fail 2005;7:1059 – 69. [7] Cleland JGF, Nikitin N, McGowan J. Levosimendan: first in a new class of inodilator for acute and chronic severe heart failure. Expert Rev Cardiovasc Ther 2004;2:9 – 19. [8] Cleland JG, McGowan J. Levosimendan: a new era for inodilator therapy for heart failure? Curr Opin Cardiol 2002;17:257 – 65. [9] Coletta AP, Cleland JG, Freemantle N, Clark AL. Clinical trials update from the European Society of Cardiology Heart Failure Meeting: SHAPE, BRING-UP 2 VAS, COLA II, FOSIDIAL, BETACAR, CASINO and meta-analysis of cardiac resynchronisation therapy. Eur J Heart Fail 2004;6:673 – 6. [10] Moiseyev VS, Poder P, Andrejevs N, et al. Safety and efficacy of a novel calcium sensitiser, levosimendan, in patients with left ventricular failure due to an acute myocardial infarction. A randomised, placebocontrolled, double-blind study (RUSSLAN). Eur Heart J 2002;23: 132 – 42. [11] The CONSENSUS trial study group. Effects of enalapril on mortality in severe congestive heart failure. Results of the Cooperative North Scandinavian Enalapril Survival Study (CONSENSUS). N Eng J Med 1987;316:1429 – 35. [12] Follath F, Cleland JGF, Just H, et al. Efficacy and safety of intravenous levosimendan compared with dobutamine in severe low-output heart failure (the LIDO study): a randomised double-blind trial. Lancet 2002;360:196 – 202. [13] Thackray S, Easthaugh J, Freemantle N, Cleland JG. The effectiveness of intravenous inotropic drugs acting through the adrenergic pathway in patients with heart failure—a meta-regression analysis. Eur J Heart Fail 2002;4:515 – 29. [14] Dormandy JA, Charbonnel B, Eckland DJ, et al. Secondary prevention of macrovascular events in patients with type 2 diabetes in the PROactive study (Prospective pioglitazone clinical trial in macrovascular events): a randomised controlled trial. Lancet 2005;366: 1279 – 89. Downloaded from http://eurjhf.oxfordjournals.org/ at Pennsylvania State University on March 4, 2014 be retained is uncertain. Are these data sufficient to warrant the widespread use of levosimendan? This depends on your clinical practice. If you do not use intravenous inotropic or vasodilator agents for the management of heart failure then there is insufficient evidence, as yet, to suggest that you should use levosimendan. However, there is as much or more evidence for the safety and efficacy of levosimendan for acute on chronic heart failure than for any other intravenous inotropic or vasodilator agent, including nitrates or nesiritide. Therefore, if you do use such intravenous agents for the treatment of such patients you might consider levosimendan, even perhaps as the agent of first choice provided cost is not an issue. Clearly, more clinical trial data are desirable and will probably be required by regulators. Further clinical trials comparing levosimendan against placebo, dobutamine or intravenous nitrates would be of great interest. However, short-term treatment with any agent without the potential for long-term reinforcement may have limited long-term success. Studies of pulsed inotropic therapy and of oral levosimendan are planned or are underway.