| UF
physicians launch cyberspace-aided study to examine safety of controversial heart drug
RELEASE DATE:
March 31, 1997
By Melanie Fridl Ross
GAINESVILLE, Fla.---University of Florida cardiologists are at the
forefront of a $30 million study that will use the Internet to determine whether a
treatment strategy for high blood pressure and angina increases the risk of heart attack,
stroke or death.
Physicians will compare the approach, which involves a widely prescribed class of
medications called calcium antagonists, with a plan that omits these medications.
The international study is striking both for its sheer magnitude -- 1,500 physicians will
enroll 27,000 patients from nine countries -- and because all facets of the project will
be conducted in cyberspace, using a computer and the Internet to log in data and generate
prescriptions.
The International Verapamil SR-Trandolapril Study, known as INVEST, seeks to show treatment based on calcium antagonists
is at least as effective as standard therapy using beta-blockers and diuretics.
Beta-blockers reduce the heart's work load, slowing heart rate and reducing the force of
contractions; diuretics help lower blood pressure.
Physicians have used calcium antagonists to treat high blood pressure and other
heart-related ailments for more than two decades. The drugs decrease the work of the
heart's blood pumping, reduce the pressure of blood flow through the body and improve
blood circulation through heart muscle.
While studies have shown verapamil SR and beta-blockers are of similar benefit for
patients with the chest pain known as stable angina pectoris and for those who have
suffered a heart attack, to date researchers have not put calcium antagonists to the same
rigorous scientific test for patients with high blood pressure.
This past year, a Food and Drug Administration panel concluded there was no reason to
discourage the use of calcium antagonists in general, despite early studies linking a
short-acting form of the drug to an increased risk of heart attack or death in some
patients.
"This has created tremendous controversy," says Dr. Carl Pepine, co-director of
cardiovascular medicine at UF's College of Medicine and the study's originator. "This
is the sort of claim that can't be defended either way because we have no direct data. The
purpose of this study is to address that." The project is funded by Knoll AG -- the
originator of the first calcium antagonist, verapamil -- and will take place in the United
States, Canada, Germany, South Africa and several other countries. UF researchers will
receive a grant of $16 million to develop and oversee the project. Knoll AG is a
subsidiary of the German chemical company BASF AG.
More than 62 million Americans have high blood pressure, also known as hypertension,
according to the American Heart Association. Up to half of all patients with coronary
artery disease also may be hypertensive.
The study, slated to begin this summer, involves 15 regional directors selected by Pepine,
the study's principal investigator. The regional directors will identify 150 cardiologists
who in turn will recommend 1,500 primary-care physicians. And those doctors, the study's
physician investigators, each will identify 15 to 20 patients -- anyone 45 or older with
documented high blood pressure and coronary artery disease -- to participate.
"We have the ability to totally conduct this trial by electronic means, rapidly
enrolling thousands of patients in four to six months and monitoring them for two years
with immediate tracking of all the data ," Pepine says. "We believe this is the
way trials will be done in the future."
A second major feature: The computer-generated patient report becomes the official patient
medical record, increasing efficiency for the physician. All patient information will be
encrypted and secured to ensure it is inaccessible to the public.
To visit the study Web site, which will feature a public page with links to other related
sites, point your browser to http://invest.biostat.ufl.edu
For more information contact Melanie Ross, Health Science Center Communications
352/690-7051 or email: rossm2@mail.firn.edu |