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  • Title: Adding the new calcium antagonist mibefradil to patients receiving long-term beta-blocker therapy results in improved antianginal and antiischemic efficacy.
    Author: Schneeweiss A, Kobrin I, Charlon V, Caspi A, Marmor A, Sclarovsky S, Reisin L, Schlesinger Z.
    Journal: Am Heart J; 1998 Feb; 135(2 Pt 1):272-80. PubMed ID: 9489976.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy, tolerability, and safety of mibefradil, a new selective T-type calcium channel blocker, in patients with chronic stable angina pectoris receiving concomitant beta-blocker therapy. DESIGN: This was a multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. METHODS: Ninety-five patients receiving a stable dose of beta-blockers, which was not changed for the purpose of the study, were administered either 50 mg mibefradil once daily for 2 weeks, then 100 mg once daily for 2 weeks, or matching placebo. Efficacy was evaluated by treadmill exercise tolerance testing 24 hours after dose and by diary registration of anginal episodes and nitroglycerin consumption. RESULTS: Two weeks of treatment with 50 mg mibefradil resulted in a significant increase in symptom-limited exercise duration and a significant delay in the onset of persistent 1 mm ST-segment depression (placebo-corrected treatment effect: 23.2 and 51.7 seconds, respectively). Treatment with the 100 mg dose for 2 additional weeks resulted in a larger improvement in treadmill exercise tolerance testing duration and onset of ischemia (placebo-corrected treatment effect: 52.7 and 75.8 seconds, respectively). In addition, a significant decrease in weekly anginal episodes was observed with the 100 mg dose of mibefradil compared with the effect in the placebo group (-53% vs - 12%, p = 0.037). CONCLUSIONS: The combined treatment of mibefradil and beta-blockers was well tolerated, and the overall incidence of adverse events was no different from that with beta-blockers alone. The results indicate that adding mibefradil to chronic beta-blocker treatment is associated with significant improvement in efficacy, which is not achieved at the expense of tolerability.
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