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The HOPE (Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation)...
Journal article

The HOPE (Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation) Study and its Consequences

Abstract

The HOPE study was a 19 country, prospective randomized trial in which the ACE-inhibitor Ramipril but not Vitamin E significantly reduced the risk of future cardiovascular events in a high-risk population of men and women, including many with diabetes. The benefits were present in all sub-groups, independent of the presence or absence of diabetes, hypertension, evidence of cardiovascular disease, microalbuminuria, blood pressure lowering, the use of aspirin, lipid-lowering or antihypertensive medication. It provided clear evidence that Ramipril should safely and cost-effectively be used in individuals not known to have low ventricular ejection fraction or heart failure but at high-risk of cardiovascular events. It was also beneficial in patients with renal insufficiency, reducing progression of proteinuria and development of new microalbuminuria. It provided micro- and macrovascular benefits in people with diabetes, reduced the development of new cases of diabetes and showed a positive and graded association between the waist-to-hip ratio and the risk of developing diabetes. Sub-studies completed and on-going into the predictive role of natriuretic peptides, infectious and inflammatory markers, provide insight into possible mechanisms of action of Ramipril.

Authors

Mcqueen MJ; Lonn E; Gerstein HC; Bosch J; Yusuf S

Journal

Scandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation, Vol. 65, No. sup240, pp. 143–156

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

January 1, 2005

DOI

10.1080/00365510500236366

ISSN

0036-5513

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