Objective: To study the hemodynamic effects of prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) administered in addition to a standard catecholamine infusion in patients with severe chronic heart failure.
Design: Prospective, placebo-controlled, randomized, single-blind study.
Setting: Intensive care unit at a university hospital.
Patients: Thirty patients with severe chronic heart failure, New York Heart Association functional class IV (28 men, two women, with a mean age of 54 +/- 2 yrs, mean left ventricular ejection fraction 10 +/- 0.6%). All patients received oral therapy with digitalis, furosemide (mean dose 300 +/- 46 mg/day), and enalapril (20 +/- 2.7 mg/day).
Interventions: Hemodynamic measurements using pulmonary artery flotation catheters were performed at baseline, > or = 24 hrs after standardized catecholamine infusion with dopamine (3 micrograms/kg/min) and dobutamine (5 micrograms/kg/min), as well as 48 hrs after randomization to infusion therapy with PGE1 (30 ng/kg/min) or a placebo.
Measurements and main results: The addition of PGE1 to an ongoing catecholamine infusion in 20 patients caused a 16 +/- 4% decrease in mean pulmonary arterial pressure (p < .001), a 22 +/- 5% decrease in pulmonary artery occlusion pressure (p < .0001), a 24 +/- 8% decrease in pulmonary vascular resistance index (p < .001), a 20 +/- 9% decrease in right atrial pressure (p < .01), a 14 +/- 3% decrease in mean arterial pressure (p < .001), and a 29 +/- 4% decrease in systemic vascular resistance index (p < .0001). These PGE1-induced decreases occurred without a change in heart rate. Stroke volume index increased with PGE1 therapy by 34 +/- 7% (p < .0001), and cardiac index increased by 34 +/- 6% (p < .0001). No hemodynamic changes were observed during combined infusion with catecholamines and placebo in ten patients.
Conclusion: PGE1 improves the hemodynamic state in end-stage chronic heart failure patients already receiving a standard dose dopamine/dobutamine infusion.