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J Am Coll Cardiol, 1990; 15:915-921
© 1990 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation
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Improved infarct-related arterial patency after high dose, weight-adjusted, rapid infusion of tissue-type plasminogen activator in myocardial infarction: results of a multicenter randomized trial of two dosage regimens

RW Smalling, R Schumacher, D Morris, K Harder, F Fuentes, RP Valentine, LL Battey Jr, M Merhige, DE Pitts, HA Lieberman, et al.

University of Texas Medical School, Houston 77030.

To determine whether a weight-adjusted high dose (2 mg/kg body weight over 3 h) rapid infusion of recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (rt-PA) was more efficacious than a weight-adjusted standard dose (1.25 mg/kg over 3 h) in achieving reperfusion in the setting of acute myocardial infarction, 175 patients were entered into a randomized multicenter trial. Eighty-four patients were entered into the high dose group, receiving 1.2 mg/kg (10% given as a bolus injection) over 1 h, followed by 0.8 mg/kg over the next 2 h. Ninety-one patients were given 0.75 mg/kg (10% given as a bolus injection) in 1 h, followed by 0.5 mg/kg administered over the next 2 h. The median dose in the group that received 2 mg/kg dose was 145 mg, compared with 100 mg in the group that received 1.25 mg/kg. The 90 min patency rate in the group that received 2 mg/kg was 84% compared with 70% in the group that received 1.25 mg/kg (p = 0.003). Sixty-four percent of the patients in each group underwent coronary angioplasty at the time of cardiac catheterization. The infarct-related artery patency rate at the end of catheterization was 91% in the group that received 2 mg/kg compared with 83% in the group that received 1.25 mg/kg (p = 0.08). Among patients with a patent infarct-related coronary artery after catheterization, the 6 month mortality rate in the group that received 2 mg/kg was 2.9% compared with 9.8% in the group that received 1.25 mg/kg (p = 0.15). The bleeding complication rate in the two groups was similar.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


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