Stopping beta-blockers years after heart attack is safe
In stable patients years after a heart attack, stopping beta-blockers was no worse than continuing them for death, another heart attack, or heart-failure hospitalization.
*Open-label randomized noninferiority trial; Level 1b (OCEBM).
Citation
Choi KH, Kang D, Kim W, et al.; SMART-DECISION Investigators. Discontinuation of Beta-Blocker Therapy after Myocardial Infarction. New England Journal of Medicine. 2026;394:1302-1312. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2601005.
Background
Many people remain on beta-blockers long after a heart attack, even when their heart pumping function is preserved and they have no heart failure. Whether long-term continuation helps this lower-risk group is uncertain.
Patients
2540 stable adults in South Korea with prior myocardial infarction, left ventricular ejection fraction at least 40%, no heart failure, and on beta-blockers for at least 1 year. Key exclusions: ejection fraction below 40%, ongoing heart failure treatment, atrial fibrillation, or beta-blocker contraindications.
Intervention
Immediate discontinuation of beta-blocker therapy.
Control
Continue the same beta-blocker and dose.
Outcome
(Primary) Composite of death from any cause, recurrent myocardial infarction, or hospitalization for heart failure (noninferiority margin: upper 95% confidence limit below 1.4 for the hazard ratio).
Follow-up Period
Median 3.1 years (interquartile range, 2.5 to 3.5).
Results
| Outcome |
Stopped beta-blocker |
Continued beta-blocker |
Conclusion |
| Death, recurrent myocardial infarction, or heart-failure hospitalization (primary) |
7.2% (4-year estimate) |
9.0% (4-year estimate) |
Noninferior (met prespecified margin) |
Serious adverse events were similar between groups. Analyses were intention-to-treat; per-protocol results were consistent. This was a noninferiority trial.
Limitations
Open-label design could influence some care decisions, although outcomes were mostly objective and independently reviewed. Participants were a selected, very stable group enrolled years after the heart attack, limiting applicability to earlier or higher-risk patients. The noninferiority margin was relatively wide and event rates were low, reducing precision. Few women were enrolled, making results less certain for women.
Funding
Patient-Centered Clinical Research Coordinating Center, South Korea Ministry of Health and Welfare.
Clinical Application
For stable post–myocardial infarction patients (ejection fraction ≥40%, no heart failure), consider stopping beta-blockers after ≥1 year; monitor blood pressure and heart rate.