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Friday, October
15, 2004
ESCAPE, SHOCK-2 to be Featured at 2004 AHA Scientific Sessions
By Julie McKeel
The annual Scientific Sessions of the American Heart Association
(AHA) feature 4 days of invited lectures, investigative reports,
and presentations representing all cardiovascular fields and related
disciplines. This year, these will include the main results of two
important DCRI trials and numerous other presentations.
This year’s meeting will be held at the Morial Convention
Center in New Orleans, Louisiana, November 7-10. The Scientific
Sessions offer a unique opportunity to gather with colleagues from
around the world with a broad range of expertise. The scope and
quality of scientific exchange at the Sessions make this the premier
cardiovascular research meeting in the world.
DCRI faculty and fellows will participate in at least 19 oral or
poster presentations during the week. In addition, the results of
the Evaluation Study of Congestive heart failure and Pulmonary Artery
Catheterization Effectiveness (ESCAPE) and SHould we inhibit nitric
Oxide synthase in patients with Cardiogenic shocK? (SHOCK-2) pilot
study will be presented at this year’s conference.
The DCRI’s Dr. Monica Shah and Lynne Stevenson, MD, of Brigham
and Women’s Hospital in Boston, will present the results of
the ESCAPE trial on November 9. ESCAPE was a multicenter trial designed
to test the long-term safety and effectiveness of treatment guided
by PAC monitoring and clinical assessments versus that guided by clinical
assessments alone in 500 patients hospitalized with severe heart failure.
The primary end point of ESCAPE was the number of days that patients
were hospitalized or dead during the 6 months after randomization.
Secondary end points were changes in blood flow through the heart,
peak oxygen consumption, and levels of natriuretic peptides, which
are proteins produced by the heart in response to overwork. Other
secondary end points included PAC-associated complications, resource
use, quality-of-life measures, distance walked in 6 minutes, and
survival adjusted for patient preferences.
The SHOCK-2 pilot study, which will be presented on November 8,
enrolled 79 patients with heart attack and cardiogenic shock at
26 sites in the U.S., Israel, and Europe. The patients were randomly
assigned to receive L-NMMA, a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, or
a placebo, and the primary endpoint was the incidence of death at
30 days.
The DCRI developed and distributed the case report form, managed
and analyzed the data, and provided safety surveillance, randomization,
and electrocardiographic (ECG) core laboratory services for the
study, which was sponsored by ArgiNOx, Inc.
See http://dcri.org/research/meetings/2004AHA.pdf
for a comprehensive list of DCRI presentations being prepared for
the Scientific Sessions this year. DCRI will again sponsor a booth
at the conference, which will feature flyers and press releases
about the latest trial results.
The general goals of the Sessions are to present recent advances
in the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of cardiovascular disease
and stroke as well as new clinical research advances. In addition,
the various sessions provide a forum for the exchange of new research
by scientists/investigators working in cardiovascular disease and
stroke; a review of current patterns in the prevention, diagnosis,
and treatment of cardiovascular disease and stroke; and opportunities
to learn about state-of-the-art cardiovascular research and how
it applies to clinical practice.
For more information about this year’s Scientific Sessions,
please visit http://scientificsessions.org
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