Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition with quinapril improves endothelial vasomotor dysfunction in patients with coronary artery disease: the TREND (Trial on …

GBJ Mancini, GC Henry, C Macaya, BJ O'Neill… - Circulation, 1996 - Am Heart Assoc
GBJ Mancini, GC Henry, C Macaya, BJ O'Neill, AL Pucillo, RG Carere, TJ Wargovich…
Circulation, 1996Am Heart Assoc
Background Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors may exert some of their
benefits in the therapy of hypertension, congestive heart failure, and acute myocardial
infarction by their improvement of endothelial dysfunction. TREND (Trial on Reversing
ENdothelial Dysfunction) investigated whether quinapril might improve endothelial
dysfunction in normotensive patients with coronary artery disease and no heart failure,
cardiomyopathy, or major lipid abnormalities so that confounding variables that affect …
Background Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors may exert some of their benefits in the therapy of hypertension, congestive heart failure, and acute myocardial infarction by their improvement of endothelial dysfunction. TREND (Trial on Reversing ENdothelial Dysfunction) investigated whether quinapril might improve endothelial dysfunction in normotensive patients with coronary artery disease and no heart failure, cardiomyopathy, or major lipid abnormalities so that confounding variables that affect endothelial dysfunction could be minimized.
Methods and Results Using a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled design, we measured the effects of quinapril (40 mg daily) on coronary artery diameter responses to acetylcholine using quantitative coronary angiography. The primary response variable was the net change in the acetylcholine-provoked constriction of target segments between the baseline (prerandomization) and 6-month follow-up angiograms. The constrictive responses to acetylcholine were comparable in the placebo (n=54) and quinapril (n=51) groups at baseline. After 6 months, only the quinapril group showed significant net improvement in response to incremental concentrations of acetylcholine (4.5±3.0% [mean±SEM] versus −0.1±2.8% at 106 mol/L and 12.1±3.0% versus −0.8±2.9% at 104 mol/L, quinapril versus placebo, respectively; overall P=.002).
Conclusions TREND shows that ACE inhibition with quinapril improved endothelial dysfunction in patients who were normotensive and who did not have severe hyperlipidemia or evidence of heart failure. These benefits of ACE inhibition are likely due to attenuation of the contractile effects and superoxide-generating effects of angiotensin II and to enhancement of endothelial cell release of nitric oxide secondary to diminished breakdown of bradykinin.
Am Heart Assoc