Blockade of the reninangiotensin system has been shownto prolong survival and reduce adverse outcomes in patientswith systolic heart failure1,2,3 or left ventricular systolicdysfunction.4,5,6,7,8,9 Indeed, angiotensin-convertingenzyme(ACE) inhibitors have become a cornerstone in the treatmentof these patients.10,11,12 In addition, post hoc analyses ofpatients from the Studies of Left Ventricular Dysfunction (SOLVD)13and the Survival and Ventricular Enlargement (SAVE) trials,5,14both randomized studies that involved patients with moderate-to-severeleft ventricular dysfunction, showed a reduction in the rateof acute myocardial infarction in patients who were treatedwith an ACE inhibitor. These observations raised the possibilitythat patients with coronary artery disease might benefit fromACE-inhibitor treatment, independently of their left ventricularfunction.
More recent studies have suggested that patients at high riskfor coronary events indeed benefit from ACE-inhibitor therapy.In the Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation (HOPE)15 and theEuropean Trial on Reduction of Cardiac Events with Perindoprilin Stable Coronary Artery Disease (EUROPA),16 patients withcoronary or other vascular disease or with diabetes and anothercardiovascular risk factor had reduced rates of death from cardiovascularcauses or acute myocardial infarction when assigned to an ACEinhibitor as compared with placebo. Although both of these trialsenrolled patients without a history of heart failure, many ofthe enrollees, especially those in the HOPE study, had an increasedrisk of adverse cardiovascular events.
The goal of the Prevention of Events with Angiotensin ConvertingEnzyme Inhibition (PEACE) Trial was to test whether ACE-inhibitortherapy, when added to modern conventional therapy, would reducethe rate of nonfatal myocardial infarction, death from cardiovascularcauses, or revascularization in low-risk patients with stablecoronary artery disease and normal or slightly reduced leftventricular function.
Methods
The design of the PEACE Trial has been described previously17and is summarized here. Inclusion and exclusion criteria areshown in Table 1. This study was designed by Drs. Pfeffer, Braunwald,Domanski, Geller, and Verter. The data were held and analyzedby the clinical and statistical coordinating center under thesupervision of Dr. Fowler. The manuscript was written by Dr.Braunwald, Dr. Pfeffer, and the other members of the writingcommittee. Drs. Fowler, Pfeffer, and Braunwald take responsibilityfor the data presented.
Patients underwent randomization from November 1996 to June2000 and were followed up for as long as 7 years (median, 4.8years), until December 31, 2003. The study was conducted afterapproval from the institutional review boards at 187 sites (listedin the Appendix) in the United States (including Puerto Rico),Canada, and Italy. Patients gave their written informed consentto participate. An independent data and safety monitoring boardreviewed patient safety data and interim results. A morbidityand mortality review committee reviewed and classified all outcomes.
In February 2002, given the increasing evidence of the benefitof ACE inhibitors or angiotensin-receptor blockers in patientswith diabetes mellitus and renal disease,18,19,20 the steeringcommittee, without knowledge of the outcome data and with approvalfrom the data and safety monitoring board, advised the investigatorsto substitute open-label ACE inhibitors for the masked studytreatment in patients with diabetes and either overt proteinuriaor hypertension and microalbuminuria.
End Points
Fourteen thousand one hundred patients were required to testthe hypothesis that an ACE inhibitor would reduce the rate ofthe original primary end point, which consisted of death fromcardiovascular causes or nonfatal myocardial infarction. Thesecondary end point was a composite of death from cardiovascularcauses, nonfatal myocardial infarction, or coronary revascularization.In October 1997, after 1584 patients had undergone randomization,the steering committee (without any knowledge of outcome datafrom the trial) concluded that recruiting 14,100 patients wasnot feasible and expanded the primary end point to include coronaryrevascularization. The sample size was reduced to 8100 patients,and the original primary end point became a secondary end point.
The study prespecified five other end points based on combinationsof death from cardiovascular causes, nonfatal myocardial infarction,revascularization, unstable angina, new congestive heart failure,stroke, peripheral vascular disease, and cardiac arrhythmia.In post hoc analyses, the primary end points of the HOPE15 andEUROPA16 studies, as well as new-onset congestive heart failurerequiring hospitalization or causing death and new-onset diabetes,were also examined.
Recruitment and Randomization
Potentially eligible subjects participated in a two-week run-inphase during which they were requested to take trandolapril(Mavik, Abbott Laboratories) at a dose of 2 mg per day. Theywere then excluded if their compliance was poor or if they hadside effects or an abnormal rise in the serum concentrationof creatinine or potassium. Consenting patients who successfullycompleted the run-in phase were randomly assigned to receiveeither trandolapril or a matching placebo; randomization wasperformed with the use of permuted blocks, stratified accordingto clinical site.
At a visit six months after randomization, patients who hadtolerated the dose of 2 mg per day received a new six-monthsupply of study medication (trandolapril at a dose of 4 mg perday or matching placebo). Patients continued to be evaluatedat six-month intervals for primary and secondary end pointsand for compliance with their assigned drug regimen. The patients,investigators, and staff members remained blinded to the treatmentassignments.
Statistical Analysis
With the revised sample size, the trial had 90 percent powerto detect an 18 percent relative reduction in the incidenceof the primary end point, assuming a 19 percent cumulative incidenceof the revised primary end point in the placebo group, whenthe log-rank test was used at a 0.05 level of significance.The sample-size calculation, based on the method of Shih,21assumed a 15 percent rate of discontinuation of active treatmentand a 15 percent rate of crossover to active treatment.
The data and safety monitoring board reviewed data related tosafety and the primary end point with use of the LanDeMetsprocedure22 and an O'BrienFleming spending function tocontrol the type I error23 and recommended continuation of thetrial until its scheduled conclusion. Statistical analyses ofthe primary and secondary end points followed the intention-to-treatprinciple. Relative risks, heterogeneity among strata, and interactionsbetween treatment assignment and covariates were assessed byproportional-hazards regression.24 All reported P values aretwo-sided.
Results
Characteristics of the Patients
Of the 8290 patients who underwent randomization, 4158 wereassigned to receive trandolapril and 4132 matching placebo.All but one patient in each group began taking the assignedstudy medication. Eleven patients (three in the trandolaprilgroup and eight in the placebo group) received study medicationbut did not return for a follow-up visit. The median follow-upperiod was 4.8 years in each group.
Most baseline characteristics were similar in the two treatmentgroups (Table 2). Overall, the patients' mean (±SD) agewas 64±8 years and 18 percent were women. Fifty-fivepercent had had a myocardial infarction, 72 percent had undergoneat least one coronary-revascularization procedure, and 17 percentwere known to have diabetes. A quantitative ejection fractionwas available for 95 percent of the cohort, and the mean valuewas 58±9 percent; for the others, a two-dimensional echocardiogramwas reported as showing normal left ventricular function onqualitative assessment. Seventy percent of patients were usinglipid-lowering drugs. The average serum cholesterol concentrationwas 192 mg per deciliter (5 mmol per liter).
Table 2. Baseline Characteristics of the Patients.
Follow-up
All patients were followed until the trial closeout period (July1, 2003, to December 31, 2003), until death, or until they becamelost to follow-up. Patients were considered lost to follow-upif they had not been seen at a visit within one year beforethe end of the study. One hundred thirty-four patients (68 inthe placebo group [1.6 percent] and 66 in the trandolapril group[1.6 percent]) were lost to follow-up. Overall, vital statuswas known for all but 45 (0.5 percent) of the patients who underwentrandomization.
Compliance
Among the patients who were randomly assigned to the trandolaprilgroup, 81.9 percent were taking trandolapril or an open-labelACE inhibitor at one year, 78.5 percent were doing so at twoyears, and 74.5 percent were doing so at three years. Amongthe patients randomly assigned to the placebo group, 1.5 percentwere receiving an ACE inhibitor at one year, 4.6 percent weredoing so at two years, and 8.3 percent were doing so at threeyears; 68.6 percent of the treated group and 77.7 percent ofthe placebo group were taking the target dose of 4 mg of trandolaprilor placebo, respectively, per day. Of the 2118 patients withdiabetes at baseline or new-onset diabetes by February 1, 2002,402 (19.0 percent) had taken an open-label ACE inhibitor beforeFebruary 1, 2002; 286 (13.5 percent) did so for the first timeafter that date.
Effects on Blood Pressure
The mean blood pressure on entry into the study (before therun-in phase) was 133±17/78±10 mm Hg in the twogroups combined. After 36 months, the pressure had decreasedby 1.4±0.3/2.4±0.2 mm Hg in the placebo groupand by 4.4±0.3/3.6±0.2 mm Hg in the trandolaprilgroup. The changes in systolic and diastolic pressures weresignificantly different between the two groups at 36 months(P<0.001).
The estimated hazard ratios for all the prespecified secondaryend points in the trandolapril group, as compared with the placebogroup, ranged from 0.95 to 0.98, and none were statisticallysignificant (Table 4). Diabetes, although it was not a prespecifiedend point and although the analysis was not adjusted for multiplecomparisons, developed in fewer of the patients assigned toreceive trandolapril than of those assigned to receive placebo.In addition, fewer patients in the trandolapril group than inthe placebo group were hospitalized with or died of congestiveheart failure.
Table 4. Incidence of Secondary End Points and Other Outcomes.
Side Effects
Side effects leading to discontinuation of the study medicationoccurred in 6.5 percent of the patients in the placebo groupand 14.4 percent of those in the trandolapril group (P<0.001).The rates of cough (39.1 percent vs. 27.5 percent, P<0.01)and syncope (4.8 percent vs. 3.9 percent, P=0.04) were greaterin the trandolapril group than in the placebo group. Angioedemaoccurred in five patients in the placebo group (two receivingACE inhibitors on an open-label basis) and eight patients inthe trandolapril group.
Discussion
In the PEACE Trial, 8290 patients with stable coronary arterydisease and normal or near-normal left ventricular functionwere randomly assigned to receive placebo or trandolapril, andno significant differences in the primary end point a composite of death from cardiovascular causes, nonfatal myocardialinfarction, or revascularization or in prespecifiedsecondary end points were observed. In this trial, the ACE inhibitortrandolapril was used at the dose that had been shown in theTrandolapril Cardiac Evaluation (TRACE) Study7 to improve survivaland reduce the rate of cardiovascular events and to reduce bloodpressure in trials involving subjects with hypertension.25 Compliancewith the study medication in the PEACE Trial was similar tothat in other long-term trials of ACE inhibitors: slightly lessthan 80 percent of the patients assigned to take an ACE inhibitorand about 5 percent of those assigned to take placebo were receivingactive treatment at two years. Randomization to trandolaprilwas associated with a clear and sustained reduction of 4.5 mmHg in systolic pressure, as compared with randomization to placebo,in which a reduction of 1.5 mm Hg was observed. It was alsoassociated, in a post hoc analysis, with reductions in the numberof patients in whom diabetes developed and the number who requiredhospitalization for the management of heart failure, as hasbeen observed with other ACE inhibitors.4,18 These findingsprovide strong evidence of the pharmacologic activity of thestandard dose of trandolapril (4 mg per day).
The SAVE5 and the SOLVD2,4 trials demonstrated that ACE-inhibitortherapy reduced mortality and the rate of development or intensificationof heart failure in patients with symptomatic heart failureand those with asymptomatic left ventricular dysfunction. Despitethe use of different ACE inhibitors and inclusion criteria,both trials reported the same intriguing secondary finding that the rate of subsequent myocardial infarction was approximately20 percent lower among patients randomly assigned to the ACEinhibitor than among those assigned to a placebo.5,13,14 Theseresults suggested that inhibition of the reninangiotensinsystem may produce beneficial effects with respect to atheroscleroticevents. Since both of these trials were conducted in patientswith impaired left ventricular function and presumed activationof the reninangiotensin system, the applicability ofthese findings to populations of patients with normal left ventricularfunction remained conjectural.
Accordingly, three trials were conducted to test the hypothesisthat inhibition of the reninangiotensin system with anACE inhibitor in patients with vascular disease who do not haveovert heart failure reduces the risk of major atheroscleroticevents. In HOPE, high-risk patients with vascular disease (includingcoronary artery disease) or diabetes who did not have heartfailure and were not known to have a low ejection fraction wererandomly assigned to receive either ramipril or placebo. Thetrial showed a significant reduction (22 percent) in the primaryend point death from cardiovascular causes, nonfatalmyocardial infarction, or stroke with ramipril.15 Subsequently,the American Heart Association modified secondary-preventionguidelines, recommending that ACE inhibitors be "consideredfor all patients with vascular disease."26
In EUROPA, patients with stable coronary artery disease whodid not have clinical evidence of heart failure and who wereat a lower risk than the patients in HOPE were randomly assignedto receive perindopril or placebo.16 The patients assigned tothe ACE inhibitor had a significant reduction (20 percent) inthe primary end point death from cardiovascular causes,nonfatal myocardial infarction, or cardiac arrest. Thus, EUROPAshowed that the clinical benefits of ACE inhibitors could beextended to a population of patients with coronary artery diseasewho had a better prognosis than those in HOPE.
In the third trial (the PEACE Trial, the subject of the currentreport), 8290 patients with stable coronary artery disease andnormal or near-normal left ventricular function were randomlyassigned to receive trandolapril or placebo; ACE-inhibitor therapywas not found to have a significant benefit. No clinical benefitwas observed in the trandolapril group despite the reductionin blood pressure in that group. To interpret the predominantlynegative findings of this study in the context of the positivereports from both HOPE15 and EUROPA,16 it is useful to comparethe characteristics of the patients and the rates of eventsin those two trials with those in the PEACE Trial (Figure 2).At baseline, the patients in the PEACE Trial had an averageleft ventricular ejection fraction of 58 percent, and theiraverage creatinine and cholesterol concentrations were normal.Their average blood pressure at baseline was 133/78 mm Hg, whichwas the level achieved with use of an ACE inhibitor in bothHOPE and EUROPA.
Figure 2. Comparison of Outcomes in the PEACE Trial and HOPE.
PEACE denotes the Prevention of Events with Angiotensin Converting Enzyme Inhibition Trial, HOPE the Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation, and MI myocardial infarction.
The patients in the PEACE Trial also received more intensivemanagement of risk factors than did those in HOPE and EUROPA.At baseline, 70 percent of the patients (as compared with 29percent in HOPE and 56 percent in EUROPA) were receiving lipid-loweringtherapy. Moreover, 72 percent of the patients in the PEACE Trial,as compared with 54 percent in EUROPA and 40 percent in HOPE,had undergone coronary revascularization before enrollment;this more aggressive strategy might have contributed to thelower risk of adverse events in the PEACE Trial. Therefore,it is not surprising that with more intensive treatment of coronaryartery disease and risk-factor modification, adverse cardiovascularoutcomes in patients assigned to placebo were substantiallylower in PEACE than they were in the other two trials. Indeed,among patients assigned to take placebo, the fractions of deathsthat were deemed of cardiovascular cause also reflect this difference,at 63 percent in HOPE, 59 percent in EUROPA, and 47 percentin PEACE, as compared with 35 percent in a general populationmatched according to age and sex with the PEACE Trial cohort.27Furthermore, despite objective evidence of coronary artery diseaseamong patients in the PEACE Trial and a history of myocardialinfarction in 55 percent of them, the annualized rate of deathfrom all causes was only 1.6 percent, similar to that of anage- and sex-matched general population.27
Supported by a contract (N01HC65149) from the National Heart,Lung, and Blood Institute and by Knoll Pharmaceuticals and AbbottLaboratories, which also provided the study medication.
Dr. Braunwald reports having received research grant supportand lecture fees from Bristol-Myers Squibb and Merck; Dr. Hsiagrant support from Novartis; Dr. Pfeffer grant support and lecturefees from Novartis, as well as lecture fees from Bristol-MyersSquibb and Pfizer; and Dr. Rouleau consulting fees from Novartisand lecture fees from Pfizer and Novartis. Brigham and Women'sHospital has been awarded patents regarding the use of inhibitionof the reninangiotensin system in selected survivorsof myocardial infarction; Drs. Pfeffer and Braunwald are amongthe coinventors. The licensing agreement with Abbott and Novartisis not linked to sales.
* The investigators and research coordinators who participatedin the PEACE Trial are listed in the Appendix.
Source Information
The writing committee for the Prevention of Events with Angiotensin Converting Enzyme Inhibition (PEACE) Trial (Eugene Braunwald, M.D., Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston; Michael J. Domanski, M.D., National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Md.; Sarah E. Fowler, Ph.D., George Washington University, Rockville, Md.; Nancy L. Geller, Ph.D., National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; Bernard J. Gersh, M.D., Mayo Clinic Foundation, Rochester, Minn.; Judith Hsia, M.D., George Washington University, Washington, D.C.; Marc A. Pfeffer, M.D., Ph.D., Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital; Madeline M. Rice, Ph.D., George Washington University, Rockville, Md.; Yves D. Rosenberg, M.D., National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; and Jean L. Rouleau, M.D., University of Montreal, Montreal) takes responsibility for the content of this article.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Braunwald at the TIMI Study Group, Brigham and Women's Hospital, 350 Longwood Ave., Boston, MA 02115.
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Appendix
The following investigators and research coordinators participatedin the PEACE Trial (the complete list is available at http://www.bsc.gwu.edu/peace/):Executive Committee E. Braunwald (co-chair), M.A. Pfeffer(co-chair), M. Domanski, S. Fowler, M. Rice, Y. Rosenberg; SteeringCommittee Members of the Executive Committee and M.Dunlap, G. Flaker, N. Geller, B. Gersh, A. Goldberg, J. Hsia,M. Limacher, A. Maggioni, P. Mills, J. Rouleau, J. Warnica,A. Wasserman; Sponsor (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute,Bethesda, Md.) M. Domanski (project officer), Y. Rosenberg(coproject officer), N. Geller, P. Mills; Clinical andStatistical Coordinating Center (George Washington University,Rockville, Md.) S. Fowler (principal investigator),P. Cleary, N. Close, T. Davey, J. Green, J. Hsia (Washington,D.C.), K. Jablonski, D. Mason, S. Pakalapati, M. Rice, J. Verter,A. Wasserman, J. Weir, V. Yalamanchili; Italian CoordinatingCenter (Centro Studi Associazione Nazionale Medici CardiologiOspedalieri Heart Care Foundation, Florence, Italy) A. Maggioni (principal investigator), G. Fabbri, M. Gorini,A. Lorimer, D. Lucci,, L. Sarti; Mortality and Morbidity ReviewCommittee J. Hsia (chair), F. Clemenza, T. Cuddy, A.Goldberg, T. Huynh, A. Maggioni, M. Starling, L. Title, M. Zabalgoitia;Pharmacy Coordinating Center (Veterans Affairs [VA] CooperativeStudies Program, Albuquerque, N.M.) C. Fye, W. Gagne;Central Biochemistry Laboratory (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis) M. Steffes (principal investigator), J. Bucksa, G. Rynders;Data and Safety Monitoring Board R. Frye (chair), E.Cooper, C. Davis, C. Grimes, N. Nanda, E. Pellegrino. UnitedStates Clinical Centers (in order of enrollment): Louis StokesCleveland VA Medical Center (VAMC), Cleveland M. Dunlap,J. Ortiz, R. Fleegle, A. Armstrong; Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit S. Jafri, A. Goldberg, D. Frank, K. Piotrowski; KaiserPermanente Medical Center, Los Angeles A. Kotlewski,P. Mahrer, R. Browning II; VAMC, Asheville, N.C. A.Sharma, S. Nediratta, G. Ely, V. Allen; Hendersonville Cardiology,Hendersonville, N.C. P. Goodfield, K. Tredinnick; HeartClinic Arkansas, Little Rock R. Hundley, V. Mabry, T.Sparrow, P. Cunningham; University of Kansas, Kansas City, Kans. S. Owens, D. Nelson; Portland Cardiovascular Institute,Portland, Oreg. S. Lewis, D. Kelley; VA Ann Arbor HealthcareSystem, Ann Arbor, Mich. M. Starling, C. Majors; Universityof Missouri, Columbia G. Flaker, K. Belew; Mayo Clinic,Rochester, Minn. R. Rodeheffer, P. Anderson; Altru Hospital,Grand Forks, N.D. E. Dodin, D. Vold; Albert EinsteinMedical Center, Philadelphia J. Wertheimer, V. McKinney;Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, Baltimore P. Ouyangand J. Wingo; Cardiology Associates of Palm Beach, Atlantis,Fla. N. Erenrich, C. Grumbach; Asheville CardiologyAssociates, Asheville, N.C. D. Serfas, D. Oskins; RiverCities Cardiology, Jeffersonville, Ind. D. Denny, B.VanVactor; St. Louis University, St. Louis B. Chaitman,S. Aubuchon; Cardiovascular Associates, Denver C. Brachfeld,B. McKinster; Cardiovascular Associates of Northern Wisconsin,Wausau T. Logemann, D. Joyce; Central Arkansas VeteransHealthcare System, Little Rock E. Smith, R. Pacheco;University of FloridaVAMC, Gainesville M. Limacher,B. Bryant; Albany Associates in Cardiology, Albany, N.Y. D. Wolinsky, L. Westlake-Hicks; Charlotte Heart Group ResearchCenter, Port Charlotte, Fla. M. Lopez, R. Schenks; StateUniversity of New York at Buffalo General Hospital, Buffalo S. Graham, J. Jackson; Cardiology Associates, RapidCity, S.D. S. Durr, R. De Raad; Brigham and Women'sHospital, Boston S. Solomon, R. Mercier; Mid-ValleyCardiology, Kingston, N.Y. E. Lader, M. Meyer; IowaHeart Center, Des Moines W. Wickemeyer, N. Young; GulfcoastVeterans Health Care System Hospital, Biloxi, Miss. B. Omar, L. Clark; Louisiana State University, Shreveport P. Reddy, T. Norwood; Heart Center, Salt Lake City J.Perry, T. Romero; Pikes Peak Cardiology, Colorado Springs, Colo. T. Eastburn, K. Hicks; South Texas Cardiovascular Consultants,San Antonio A. Jain, L. Limon; VCU Medical Center, Richmond,Va. G. Vetrovec, K. Damico; University of Rochester,Rochester, N.Y. C.-S. Liang, E. Perkins; George WashingtonUniversity, Washington, D.C. R. Katz, J. Arevalo; Universityof Oklahoma, Oklahoma City U. Thadani, M. Thresher;Androscoggin Cardiology Associates, Auburn, Me. R. Weiss,B. Brennan; Appleton Heart Institute, Appleton, Wis. P. Ackell, M. Noble; Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem,N.C. F. Kahl, S. Soots; Winthrop University, Mineola,N.Y. K. Marzo, P. Hodnett; Heart and Vascular Instituteof Texas, San Antonio J. Seaworth, S. Farris; BaystateMedical Center, Springfield, Mass. L. Jiang, M. Duquette;Community Hospitals of Indianapolis, Indianapolis D.Ziperman, J. Greene-Nashold; William Beaumont Hospital, RoyalOak, Mich. G. Timmis, C. Clark; Nisus Research, NorthernMichigan Hospital, Petoskey H. Colfer, M. Ronquist;University of Louisville, Louisville, Ky. S. Wagner,M. Olliges; Creighton Cardiac Center, Omaha, Nebr. S.Mohiuddin, L. Rasmussen; Brevard Cardiology Physicians, MerrittIsland, Fla. K. Sheikh, T. Hengerer-Yates; Universityof Medicine and Dentistry of New JerseyRobert Wood JohnsonMedical School, New Brunswick, N.J. S. Palmeri, L. Casazza;Oklahoma Heart Institute, Tulsa W. Leimbach, Jr., D.Ritter; University of Texas, San Antonio M. Zabalgoitia,A. Paredes; Mid-Atlantic Permanente Group, Fairfax, Va. J. Golden, B. McCaskill; Providence Hospital, Livonia, Mich. W. Duvernoy, D. Cunningham; Southern Arizona VA HealthCare System, Tucson S. Goldman, J. Ohm; Regions Hospital,St. Paul, Minn. J. McBride, B. Foster; NorthwesternUniversity, Chicago R. Rosenson, K. Dahle; HeartCareMidwest, Peoria, Ill. P. Schmidt, C. Ness; Mayo Clinic,Jacksonville, Fla. J. Patton, C. Davison; Oakwood Hospital,Medical Center, Dearborn, Mich. A. Riba, C. Draus; St.Luke'sRoosevelt Hospital Center, New York E.Herzog, D. Tormey; Cardiac Care Associates, Fairfax, Va. A. Keller, M. Obeid; Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston G. Hendrix, M. Schulz; Ohio State University MedicalCenter, Columbus J. Larry, J. Homan; Hunterdon CardiologyAssociates, Flemington, N.J. A. Kutscher, Jr.; SouthShore Cardiology, South Weymouth, Mass. W. Calhoon,S. Medici; VAMC, Pittsburgh M. Amidi, M. Bell; CookCounty Hospital, Chicago S. Khadra, J. Bax; SoutheasternCardiology Consultants, Montgomery, Ala. K. Wool, J.Parker; Mercy Hospital Anderson, Cincinnati M. Smith,P. Feick; VAMC, Newington, Conn. P. Schulman, J. Folger;Consultants in Cardiovascular Medicine, Melrose Park, Ill. J. Shanes, K. Guard; Hawthorne Medical Associates, North Dartmouth,Mass. S. Solomon, M. English; Compass Medical Associates,Abington, Mass. J. Ellis, D. Kelly; Geisinger MedicalCenter, Danville, Pa. F. Menapace, Jr., M. Kleman; RochesterGeneral Hospital, Rochester, N.Y. P. Fitzpatrick, A.Sass; Rochester Cardiopulmonary Group, Rochester, N.Y. J. Gillespie, L. Cohen; Main Line Health Heart Center, Wynnewood,Pa. P. Kowey, S. Heaney; Hahnemann University, Philadelphia W. Kussmaul, L. Mark; Bay Area Cardiology Associates,Brandon, Fla. W. Bugni, S. Sweeney; Lindner ClinicalTrial Center, Cincinnati D. Kereiakes, K. Ibanez; NewYork University Medical Center, New York W. Slater,B. Guerra; Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center, New York E.Brown, Jr., A. Valeria; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston M. Fifer, P. Benard; Pharmacotherapy Research Associates,Zanesville, Ohio C. Feicht, K. Crist; Albany MedicalCollege, Albany, N.Y. R. Capone, T. Omorogbe; CharlesRiver Medical Associates, Natick, Mass. V. Desai, J.Pierre-Louis; Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, Calif. K. Jutzy, V. Bishop; St. Francis Hospital, Evanston, Ill. S. Dadkhah, A. Fisch; Staten Island University, New York T. Costantino, M. Basilious; University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh T. Smitherman, D. Rosenfelder; Inland Cardiology Associates,Spokane, Wash. D. Canaday, J. Baxter; Spokane HeartResearch Foundation, Spokane, Wash. M. DeWood; HeartInstitute, Omaha, Nebr. D. Chapman, W. Olson; MountSinai Medical Center, Miami Beach, Fla. G. Lamas, S.Hussein; Brooklyn Hospital Center, New York R. Stein,J. Varvatsas; University of Arkansas for Medical Science, LittleRock E. Smith, C. Davison; Mount Clemens General Hospital,Mount Clemens, Mich. J. Kazmierski, K. O'Mara; FloridaHeart and Vascular Associates, Tampa J. Smith, C. Cromer;Sturdy Memorial Hospital, Attleboro, Mass. J. DiCola,S. Dolan; St. Louis VAMC, St. Louis W. Martin, H. Manns;Oklahoma Foundation for Cardiovascular Research, Oklahoma City R. Kipperman, Y. Zhang; Cardiology Consultants, Woodbury,N.Y. D. Grossman, B. Morrison; Raritan Bay Medical Center,Perth Amboy, N.J. A. Chiaramida, R. Gaven; White MemorialMedical Center, Los Angeles V. DeQuattro, Z. Song; EndovascularResearch, Eugene, Oreg. P. Bergin, J. Masengil; Universityof Tennessee, Knoxville D. Ely, F. Reynolds; San DiegoCardiovascular Research Associates, Encinitas, Calif. G. Dennish, III, N. Horton; University of Michigan, Ann Arbor E. Bates, A. Luciano; University of South Carolina,Columbia J. Moloo, M. Kaminski; Washington University,St. Louis E. Geltman, J. Flanagan; Carl T. Hayden VAMC,Phoenix, Ariz. J. Felicetta, L. Beckner; King/Drew MedicalCenter, Los Angeles V. Kaushik, A. Mueco; Mayo Clinic,Scottsdale, Ariz. R. Lee, A. Metcalf; IHC Clinical ResearchFoundation, Salt Lake City R. Fowles, K. Summers; OregonClinical Research Trials, Eugene M. Heerema, M. Jacobson;VAMC, Northport, N.Y. P. Diggs, M. Roeske; Prairie CardiovascularConsultants, Decatur, Ill. R. Rosenstein; Oregon Clinic,Portland D. Dawley, D. Dorst. Canadian Clinical Centers(in order of enrollment): Foothills Hospital, Calgary J. Warnica, B. Smith, L. Walker, D. Scarcelli; Health SciencesCentre, Winnipeg J. Tam, T. Cuddy, P. Courcelles, N.Miller; Montreal Heart Institute, Montreal G. Gosselin,A. Ducharme, J. Marquis, M. Lamy; Queen Elizabeth II HealthSciences Centre, Halifax L. Title, D. Johnstone, M.Francis, J. Cossett; Centre Hospital Beauce Etchemin, St. GeorgesBeauce D. Dion, R. St.-Hilaire, A. Morissette, F. Poulin;London Health Sciences Centre, London M. Arnold, M.Krupa; Centre Hospital de la Region de l'Amiante, Thetford Mines M. Boulianne, J. Campeau, F. Ouimet, B. Roberge; MontrealGeneral Hospital, Montreal T. Huynh, S. Finkenbine,B. St. Jacques, C. Boudreault; Brampton Research Associates,Brampton D. Borts, N. Bonafede, J. Burtcher, C. Edwards;Dr. R.S. Baigrie, Sudbury R. Baigrie, F. Gee, J. Judge,K. Reilly; Vancouver Hospital and Health Sciences Centre, Vancouver V. Bernstein, K. MacDonald, S. Mooney; Laval Hospital,Ste.-Foy J. Rouleau, R. Vienneau; Lakeshore GeneralHospital, Pointe-Clair J.-P. Mayer, S. Mitges; NeurekaResearch Incorporated, Sudbury S. Nawaz, R. Dhaliwal;Centre Hospitalier Affilié Universitaire de QuébecPavillion Enfant Jesus, Quebec P. Talbot, M. Talbot;Health Sciences Centre, St. John's B. Sussex, S. Newman;University of Ottawa, Ottawa M. Baird M. Fraser; Hôp.Notre-Dame, Montreal C. Guimond, J. Leboeuf; St. Michael'sHospital, Toronto G. Moe, D. Day; Innovative CardiacCare, Saskatoon G. Rajakumar, B. Kroeger; Saskatoon M. Khouri, N. Zello; Group Health Centre, Sault Ste.Marie H. Lee, K. Barban; London Health Sciences Centre-UniversityCampus, London W. Kostuk, A.-M. Powell; Royal VictoriaHospital, Montreal M. Smilovitch, V. Toyota; CentreHospitalier de l'Université de Montréal (CHUM),Hotel-Dieu, Montreal D. Phaneuf, R. Duclos; Hop. Saint-LucDu CHUM, Montreal G. Goulet, L. Primeau; Windsor T. Machel, J. Morash; Hôpital Maisonneuve-Rosemont, Montreal D. Gossard, L. Boutin; Cambridge S. Vizel, B.Fox; St. Joseph's Hospital, Hamilton E. Stanton, M.Lawrence; Sullivan Cardiology Associates, Hamilton H.Sullivan, R. Paterson; Odyssey Research Services, Victoria G. Hoag, K. Ilott; Prince George Regional Hospital, Prince George J. Dufton, R. Sweeney. Puerto Rican Clinical Centers(in order of enrollment): University of Puerto Rico, San Juan M. Garcia-Palmieri, H. Banchs, M. Gonzalez, M. Perez;Centro Cardiovascular de Caguas, Caguas P. Colon, Sr.,N. Vazquez. Italian Clinical Centers (in order of enrollment):Ospedale Civile, Passirana-Rho C. Schweiger, A. Frisinghelli;Ospedale Cardinale Panico, Tricase A. Galati, P. Palma;Ospedale G.F. Ingrassia, Palermo P. Di Pasquale, F.Clemenza; Ospedale San Bartolomeo, Sarzana G. Filorizzo,R. Petacchi; Ospedale di Circolo Zappatoni, Cassano d'Adda R. Cogo, M. Ferrari; Presidio Ospedale Villa Sofia, Palermo A. Battaglia, F. Mancino; Ospedale Civile, Policoro B. D'Alessandro, L. Truncellito; Pres Ospedale S. Mariadella Speranza, Battipaglia M. Maina, S. Romanzi; OspedaleS. Sebastiano di Caserta C. Chieffo, A. Cardillo; OspedaleIgnazio Veris Delli Ponti, Scorrano E. De Lorenzi, A.Bergarno; Ospedale Cardarelli, Napoli A. Boccalatte,G. Gaeta; Presidio Ospedale, Montebelluna G. Neri, G.Masaro; Policlinico Catanzaro, Catanzaro F. Perticone,R. Maio; Ospedale Riuniti, Foggia M. De Biase, M. Carrone;Fondazione S. Maugeri Clinica del Lavoro, Cassano delle Murge D. Scrutinio, R. La Gioia; Ospedale Civile, Lanciano L. Leonzio, D. Tullio; Ospedale Generale di Zona Valduce,Como M. Santarone, L. Tagliagambe; Presidio Ospedale,Rovigo P. Zonzin, M. Capanna; Ospedale A. Ajello, MazaraDel Vallo N. Di Giovanni, I. Fiore; Ospedale Riuniti,Bergamo A. Gavazzi, D. Mazzoleni; Ospedale Bellaria,Bologna G. Pinelli, M. Ribani; Ospedale Garibaldi, Catania S. Mangiameli, V. Rubino; Ospedale L. Sacco, Milan M. Viecca, R. Sala; Ospedale San Michele Brotzu, Cagliari M. Porcu, S. Salis; Ospedale S. Maria Della Pietà, Camerino R. Amici, G. Patteri; Ospedale Civile Mellini, Chiari F. Bortolini, A. Turelli; Ospedale Civile Santa MariaDelle Croci, Ravenna A. Maresta, G. Dalla Valle; OspedaleCivile Sant'Antonio Abate, Trapani G. Braschi, M. Abrignani;Ospedale SS. Annunziata, Sassari P. Terrosu, M. Castellaccio;Ospedale San Giovanni, Rome A. Boccanelli, P. Morosetti;Ospedale Generale Provinciale Lotti, Pontedera G. Tartarini,D. Levantesi; Ospedale San Gerardo, Monza A. Grieco,A. Cazzaniga; Ospedale di Circolo Galmarini, Tradate G. Poggio, S. Giani; Ospedale Sant'Anna, Como G. Ferrari,R. Belluschi; Spedali Riuniti, Pistoia F. Del Citerna,E. Balli; Presidio Ospedale, Cittadella P. Maiolino,L. Pedon; Ospedale Vincenzo Monaldi, Naples N. Mininni,V. Monda.
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