Methods: the four double-blind, randomized, parallel-group SMILE studies, compared the efficacy and safety of 6-48 week treatment with zofenopril 60 mg/day with that of placebo, lisinopril 10 mg/day or ramipril 10 mg/day in 3630 AMI patients. This pooled analysis compared treatment efficacy (1-year combined occurrence of death or hospitalization for CV causes) in 2733 men and 897 women. Background: the SMILE studies proved the prognostic benefit of zofenopril vs. placebo or other ACE-inhibitors (ACEIs) in post-acute myocardial infarction (AMI). In this retrospective pooled analysis of these studies we assessed whether the zofenopril effect is influenced by gender. Copyright: Results: women were older than men, had a higher prevalence of diabetes and of other major CV risk factors. The risk of a major CV event was significantly larger for women (23% vs. 17% men, p<0.001). Between-gender risk difference was more marked for people living in Southern (+54%) than in Northern Europe (+12%). In both genders zofenopril similarly reduced the 1-year risk of CV morbidity and mortality vs. placebo (239% men, p = 0.0001;240% women, p = 0.005). The risk reduction was more marked with zofenopril than with the other ACEIs, particularly in men (227%, p = 0.012; women: 214%, p = 0.479). The drug safety profile was similar between genders in zofenopril-treated patients, while it was worse in women treated with other ACEIs. Conclusions: post-AMI women are at higher risk of CV complications than men, particularly when living in Mediterranean countries. Their response to ACE-inhibition varies according to the type of drug and is usually better in men.
CITATION STYLE
Franconi, F., Omboni, S., Ambrosioni, E., Reggiardo, G., Campesi, I., & Borghi, C. (2014). Effects of treatment with zofenopril in men and women with acute myocardial infarction: Gender analysis of the SMILE program. PLoS ONE, 9(11). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111558
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