Case Study 1. The Acute Infarct Ramipril Efficacy Study: a simple treatment to improve survival after acute myocardial infarction
Submitting Institution
University of LeedsUnit of Assessment
Clinical MedicineSummary Impact Type
HealthResearch Subject Area(s)
Medical and Health Sciences: Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology, Clinical Sciences, Public Health and Health Services
Summary of the impact
The Acute Infarct Ramipril Efficacy (AIRE) multicentre international
trial, conceived, designed, led and coordinated by Leeds was the first to
show that use of early angiotensin converting enzyme Inhibitor (ACEI)
therapy in patients with signs and symptoms of heart failure after an
acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is associated with significantly longer
survival and better quality of life. Further Leeds research showed the
beneficial effects persisted long-term. The strategy of early initiation
of ACEI is now a fundamental and routine part of the management of
patients after AMI and has contributed to better survival and quality of
life for patients around the world.
Underpinning research
Figures from the World Health Organization show that cardiovascular
disease, in particular acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and its
complications, is the number one cause of death worldwide (http://www.who.int/cardiovascular_diseases/en/).
Despite improved survival from AMI due to modern mechanical reperfusion
strategies, the debilitating syndrome of heart failure secondary to left
ventricular dysfunction is a common problem. In the late 1980s, the
potential benefits of the use ACE inhibitors (ACEI) had been proposed as a
way of limiting this long-term damage. Yet investigators had been
reluctant to adopt this strategy because of fears over a negative effect
of ACEI therapy in high-risk patients.
Leeds researcher Stephen Ball (British Heart Foundation Professor
of Cardiology, 1990-2010), conceived, designed, led and co-ordinated the
Acute Infarct Ramipril Efficacy study (AIRE, named after the river than
runs through the city). This large prospective randomised controlled trial
assessed the effect of ACEI therapy on mortality in patients sustaining an
AMI, who have clinical signs and symptoms of heart failure. This was the
first trial set up to specifically examine the use of ACEI in this
population and provided compelling evidence for the use of early and
prolonged ACEI therapy in patients with post AMI heart failure. Research
at Leeds has shown ACEI therapy in these patients protects against heart
failure death, stroke, myocardial infarction and the development of
resistant heart failure and has fundamentally changed the way patients are
managed (1,2,3).
The international multicentre study led from Leeds randomly allocated
patients to placebo or the ACEI ramipril. A total of 2006 patients meeting
the criteria, which included a background of optimal therapy, were
recruited across 14 countries and followed for 15 months. There were 170
deaths (17%) in the ACEI group compared with 222 deaths (23%) in the
placebo group. Mortality was reduced from 22.6% to 16.9%, an absolute
reduction of 5.7% and relative risk reduction of 27% (1).
A long-term follow up study in which Leeds researchers assessed the
mortality status of all 603 patients recruited from the 30 UK centres
involved in the original AIRE Study, showed ongoing benefits of treatment.
The data showed that after five years, death from all causes had occurred
in 117 (38.9%) of those treated by placebo and 83 (27.5%) of patients
assigned ramipril — a relative risk reduction of 36% and an absolute
reduction in mortality of 11.4%. This corresponded to an extra 114
patients surviving at 5 years per 1000 treated with ACEI. Treatment of
nine patients with an ACEI for one year resulted in one patient surviving
to five years (2). A subsequent systematic review of 12,763 patients,
including those from AIRE, cemented the beneficial effects of ACEI
treatment in patients sustaining an AMI confirming clear evidence of early
benefits which persisted long-term (3).
More recent work from Leeds (Mark Kearney, Professor of
Cardiovascular and Diabetes Research 2005- ; Peter Grant,
Professor of Medicine, 1990-) has shown the benefits of ACEI therapy in
patients with diabetes after AMI (4).
References to the research
(1) The Acute Infarction Ramipril Efficacy (AIRE) Study Investigators.
Effect on mortality and morbidity of survivors of acute myocardial
infarction with clinical evidence of heart failure. Lancet 1993; 342:
821-28.
The first study to show the beneficial effect of ACEI in patients
sustaining an AMI with clinical evidence of heart failure.
(2) Hall AS, Murray GD, Ball SG. Follow-up study of
patients randomly allocated ramipril or placebo for heart failure after
acute myocardial infarction: AIRE Extension (AIREX) Study. Acute
Infarction Ramipril Efficacy. Lancet 1997; 349: 1493-97.
Research showing long-term beneficial effect of ACEI in patients
sustaining an AMI with clinical evidence of heart failure.
(3) Flather M, Yusuf S, Kober L, Pfeffer M, Hall AS, Murray G,
Torp-Pedersen C, Ball S, Pogue J, Moye L, Braunwald E. Long term
ACE-inhibitor therapy in patients with heart failure or left ventricular
dysfunction: a systematic overview of data from individual patients.
Lancet 2000; 355: 1575-81.
A systematic review confirming the important role of ACEI post AMI.
(4) Cubbon RM, Gale CP, Rajwani A, Abbas A, Morrell C, Das R, Barth JH, Grant
PJ, Kearney MT, Hall AS. Aspirin and mortality in
patients with diabetes sustaining acute coronary syndrome. Diabetes Care
2008; 31: 363-65.
Data showing beneficial effect of ACEI in patients with and without
diabetes sustaining an AMI.
Details of the impact
The AIRE study, which was conceived, designed and led by staff at Leeds,
showed for the first time the benefits of early initiation of ACEI
therapy for high-risk patients with clinical signs of heart failure after
AMI. This and subsequent research has led to the global introduction of a
simple and effective treatment, improving survival and quality of life for
many thousands of patients.
Impact on health and welfare
For patients surviving AMI, the debilitating syndrome of heart failure
secondary to left ventricular dysfunction is a common problem. The body's
production of angiotensin after AMI act initially as a protective
mechanism to preserve blood pressure; however, prolonged angiotensin
production causes cell death. It had been proposed that ACEI therapy would
mitigate these effects but investigators were cautious about using the
drugs in these high-risk patients. The AIRE study was the first trial to
show survival benefits of the ACEI ramipril in these patients. A long-term
follow up study by Leeds of the trial's UK patients showed that these
beneficial effects persisted years later.
The international adoption of the strategy of early ACEI after AMI has
made it a fundamental part of routine treatment. In addition to
significantly changing clinical practice, the use of this simple and cost
effective treatment has contributed to the substantial decline in
mortality associated with AMI seen over the last two decades. For
instance, figures from the USA National Registry of Myocardial Infarction
Investigators indicates that in-hospital mortality after an AMI fell by
24% from 1990 to 2006 [A]. This trend due to improved care for AMI,
including the adoption of early secondary prevention such as ACEI
treatment, is reflected in data from other countries around the world. In
the UK, a study looking at trends in 3 year mortality in 3 month survivors
of AMI in the UK, demonstrated that between 1991 and 2002 the use of ACEI
increased from 11% to 71% and during the same period mortality fell by 28%
[B]. More recent data from the UK Myocardial Ischaemia National
Audit Project (covering England, Wales and Belfast) showed a continued
increase in the prescription of ACEI, from just over 80% of patients with
AMI in 2003 to 94% of patients with AMI in 2011/12 [C, figure 15].
In 2011/12 there were 79,433 individuals sustaining an AMI; in England,
95% of patients received ACEI treatment, Wales 90% and Belfast 98% [C;
table 7]. At a UK population level there has been a year-on-year fall in
the percentage of patients with AMI who die within 30 days of admission to
hospital [C; figures 19 and 20]. The observed improvements in
mortality are not solely attributable to use of ACEI; however, ACEI
therapy is a fundamental element of modern treatment strategies for AMI [D-F].
The AIRE study has had major reach and significance, as evidenced by its
recognition as one of the "Landmark Heart Failure Treatment Trials" [D]
which made "a fundamental contribution to international clinical
guidelines, implementation of which has delayed or prevented morbidity and
death for millions of people worldwide." [E]. "Two decades later
the results of this study still have a major impact on current guidelines
underscoring that this study significantly changed treatment of
cardiovascular high-risk patients." [F].
The importance of AIRE in contributing to the routine adoption of ACEI
therapy in patients sustaining an AMI is evidenced by the continuing
citation of this study in international clinical guidelines. The first
recommendation for the routine adoption of ACEI therapy in patients with
AMI who develop signs and symptoms of heart failure or who have reduced
left ventricular ejection fraction, the protocol used in the AIRE study,
was in the American College of Cardiology/ American Heart Association
guidelines in 1996, which cited AIRE as supporting evidence. Since the
publication of AIRE, ACEI use after AMI has become standard practice
globally and is established as a class IA recommendation by, for instance,
the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association [G]
and the European Society of Cardiology [H] guidelines for
management of acute myocardial infarction. The AIRE Study is an
underpinning reference for this therapeutic strategy in both guidelines.
In the UK, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE)
recommendation for secondary prevention following AMI, published in 2007,
has guided clinical practice during the current REF period and emphasised
the prescription of ACEI as a key priority [I, page 10]. This
guidance cites Leeds research on the efficacy of long term ACEI therapy as
supporting clinical evidence for the recommendation that: "After an MI,
all patients with preserved left ventricular function or with left
ventricular systolic dysfunction should continue treatment with an ACE
inhibitor indefinitely, whether or not they have symptoms of heart
failure." [I, page 127]. Furthermore, cost effectiveness analysis
based on AIRE contributed to the conclusion that long-term ACEI was cost
effective in patients with and without left ventricular dysfunction [I,
pages 145-151]. A partial update of these guidelines released in June 2013
for consultation continues to emphasise ACEI as a key priority in
secondary prevention in patients with AMI and includes additional priority
recommendations on correct dosing of ACEI in acknowledgement of their
ongoing importance [J]. The updated guidance emphasises the
importance of rapidly achieving the target dose, based on relevant
clinical evidence, including AIRE, for specific ACEI (e.g. ramipril 10
mg/day, as per AIRE): "Titrate the ACE inhibitor dose upwards at short
intervals (for example, every 12-24 hours) before the person leaves
hospital until the maximum tolerated or target dose is reached. If this is
not possible, this should be completed within 4-6 weeks of hospital
discharge." [J].
Sources to corroborate the impact
[A] Rogers WJ, et al. Trends in presenting characteristics and hospital
mortality among patients with ST-elevation and non-ST elevation myocardial
infarction in the National Registry of Myocardial Infarction from 1990 to
2006. Am. Heart J 2008; 156: 1026-34.
[B] Hardoon et al. Trends in longer-term survival following an acute
myocardial infarction and prescribing of evidenced-based medications in
primary care in the UK from 1991: a longitudinal population-based study. J
Epidemiol Community Health. 2011 September; 65(9): 770-774.
[C] Myocardial Ischaemia National Audit Project (MINAP). How the NHS
cares for patients with heart attack. Annual public report 2011/12. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/nicor/audits/minap/publicreports/pdfs/2012minappublicreportv2.pdf
[D] Letter of corroboration from Professor of Heart Failure and
Consultant Cardiologist, Heart Failure Unit, Kings College Hospital,
London, UK, confirming the AIRE study's fundamental contribution to
international clinical guidelines, implementation of which has delayed or
prevented morbidity and death for millions of people worldwide.
[E] Letter of corroboration from Professor of Vascular Medicine, Service
d'Hypertension et de Médecine Vasculaire, Hopital Européen Georges
Pompidou, Paris, France, confirming the AIRE study's fundamental
contribution to international clinical guidelines.
[F] Letter of corroboration from Professor of Medicine/Cardiology,
Department of Internal Medicine I, University Hospital Aachen, Germany,
confirming the lasting impact of the AIRE study on current guidelines.
[G] O'Gara et al. 2013 ACCF/AHA Guideline for the Management of
ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction: A Report of the American College of
Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice
Guidelines. Circulation. 2013;127:e362-e425.
Available from:
http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/127/4/e362.full.pdf+html. ACE
inhibitor recommendations and reference to AIRE (table 12, p e389; p e390;
table 14, p e400; AIRE referenced p e412, references 421 and 430).
[H] Van de Werf F, et al. Management of acute myocardial infarction in
patients presenting with persistent ST-segment elevation: the Task Force
on the Management of ST-Segment Elevation Acute Myocardial Infarction of
the European Society of Cardiology. Eur Heart J 2008; 29: 2909-45.
Available from: http://eurheartj.oxfordjournals.org/content/29/23/2909.full.pdf+html.
ACE inhibitor recommendations (table 15, p 2924; table 22, p 2933; AIRE
referenced on p 2944, reference 213)
[I] The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). MI:
secondary prevention. Secondary prevention in primary and secondary care
for patients following a myocardial infarction (CG48; 2007).
Available from: http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG48/Guidance/pdf/English.
ACE inhibitor recommendations (p 10; p 127); Cost effectiveness of ACE
inhibitors in patients after MI with LV dysfunction including reference to
AIRE (pp 145-151).
[J] The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence
(NICE). Post myocardial infarction Secondary prevention in primary and
secondary care for patients following a myocardial infarction. Partial
update of NICE CG48: Methods, evidence and recommendations. June 2013
Available from: http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/live/13502/64153/64153.pdf.
Updated guidance on ACEI in section 7.3 (pp 219-318). AIRE cited in: table
49 (p 228); table 61 (p 269) and references to AIRE (reference numbers 16,
24, 123, 169, 365).