The Cardiac Arrhythmia Pilot Study (CAPS) was a randomized, double-blind trial of antiarrhythmic drugs (encainide, flecainide, moricizine, imipramine and placebo) in 502 patients with an ejection fraction greater than 0.20 and at least 10 ventricular premature complexes/hour, 6 to 60 days after acute myocardial infarction. Patients were followed for 1 year and the incidence of new or worsened congestive heart failure (CHF) was evaluated. Heart failure in the 1-year follow-up was gauged by the development (in order of increasing severity) of new symptoms (grade 1), the need for a change in therapy, including addition of digitalis, addition or increase of dose of diuretics or afterload reduction agents or discontinuation of beta-blocking agents (grade 2), or by hospitalization (grade 3). Sixty-one of 502 patients (12%) required hospitalization for CHF in the 1-year follow-up. One hundred five of 403 patients (26%) in the active treatment group and 18 of 99 patients (18%) in the placebo group (difference not significant) developed CHF requiring hospitalization or a change in therapy or both. Although patients with severely impaired ejection fraction were excluded, new or worsened CHF was common in follow-up during CAPS.