Treatment of chronic heart failure with β-adrenergic receptor antagonists: a convergence of receptor pharmacology and clinical cardiology
- PMID: 22034480
- DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.111.245092
Treatment of chronic heart failure with β-adrenergic receptor antagonists: a convergence of receptor pharmacology and clinical cardiology
Abstract
Despite the absence of a systematic development plan, β-blockers have reached the top tier of medical therapies for chronic heart failure. The successful outcome was due to the many dedicated investigators who produced, over a 30-year period, increasing evidence that β-blocking agents should or actually did improve the natural history of dilated cardiomyopathies and heart failure. It took 20 years for supportive evidence to become undeniable, at which time in 1993 the formidable drug development resources of large pharmaceutical companies were deployed into Phase 3 trials. Success then came relatively quickly, and within 8 years multiple agents were on the market in the United States and Europe. Importantly, there is ample room to improve antiadrenergic therapy, through novel approaches exploiting the nuances of receptor biology and/or intracellular signaling, as well as through pharmacogenetic targeting.
Comment in
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The development of β-adrenergic receptor antagonists for the treatment of heart failure: a paradigm for translational science.Circ Res. 2011 Oct 28;109(10):1173-5. doi: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.111.255976. Circ Res. 2011. PMID: 22034479 No abstract available.
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