Scroll Up
Scroll Down
Play Play Play Play
Unregistered User
Click here if this is not your Personal Edition
 
Contact Us | Free E-Mail Updates | Journals | Register a colleague
 
 
Cholesterol/Lipid Disorders
 
   
 
SEARCH   
Doctor's Guide Free CME
Medline
Congress Resource Centre
 

 EXPLORE :
   Most Read News
 All News  All News
 All Webcasts / CME  All Webcasts / CME
 All Cases  All Cases
 Congress Resource Centre  Congress Resource Centre
 All Medical Resources  All Medical Resources
 Medical  My Personal Edition



Warning | Privacy

 

 
 Recent news - Cholesterol/Lipid Disorders
    Atorvastatin Improves Dyslipidaemia in Patients With Coronary Heart Disease, May Be Renoprotective: Presented at Renal Week 2009 - (DGDispatch)
    Cardiometabolic risk of second-generation antipsychotic medications during first-time use in children and adolescents - (JAMA)
    TopAbstracts in Cholesterol/Lipid Disorders 10/29/2009 - (DGNews)
    Addition of Ezetimibe Helps More Elderly Achieve LDL Cholesterol Goal Than Uptitration of Atorvastatin: Presented at CCC - (DGDispatch)
    New Canadian Cholesterol-Lowering Guidelines Target Immediate-Risk Group: Presented at CCC - (DGDispatch)

    News archive

     Recent webcasts/CME - Cholesterol/Lipid Disorders
    • Optimizing Management of Dyslipidemia: Risk Assessment, Treatment Targets, and Adherence
    • Assessing Cardiovascular Risk
    • Setting Treatment Goals for Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease
    • Diabetes Management - Pearls of Lipid Control
      Initiating and Monitoring Statin Therapy

      Webcasts/CME archive

       Recent cases - Cholesterol/Lipid Disorders
        There May be a Link Between Intrahepatic Cholestasis of Pregnancy and Familial Combined Hyperlipidaemia: A Case Report
        Marked Aortic Valve Stenosis Progression After Receiving Long-Term Aggressive Cholesterol-Lowering Therapy Using Low-Density Lipoprotein Apheresis in a Patient With Familial Hypercholesterolemia
        Acute Myocardial Infarction in an 18 Year Old South Indian Girl with Familial Hypercholesterolemia: A Case Report
        Eruptive Xanthomas and Acute Pancreatitis in a Patient with Hypertriglyceridemia
        Abetalipoproteinemia: Two Case Reports and a Literature Review

        Cases archive
          




        my personal edition > cholesterol/lipid disorders > news
        divider

          E-Mail this DGDispatch to a colleague

        DGDispatch


        Rosuvastatin Reduces Cardiac Events in "Healthy" Patients With Low Low-Density Lipoprotein and High Levels of C-Reactive Protein: Presented at AHA

        By Ed Susman

        NEW ORLEANS -- November 10, 2008 -- Treatment with cholesterol-lowering rosuvastatin significantly reduces coronary events -- including overall mortality -- among patients who are asymptomatic for heart disease but have high levels of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein and low levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol when the treated subjects are compared with those on placebo.

        Results from the Justification for the Use of Statins in Prevention: an Interventional Trial Evaluating Rosuvastatin (JUPITER) trial were reported here at the American Heart Association (AHA) 2008 Scientific Sessions.

        Treatment with rosuvastatin 20 mg daily resulted in a lowering of LDL cholesterol by 50% compared with placebo and lowered C-reactive protein by 37%, said lead investigator Paul Ridker, MD, Center for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.

        The reported reduction resulted in a 44% decline in relative risk in the primary endpoint (the composite of myocardial infarction, stroke, arterial revascularisation, hospitalisation for unstable angina, or death from cardiovascular causes), Dr. Ridker said here on November 9, at a late-breaking oral presentation. The JUPITER results were simultaneously released in the online edition of the New England Journal of Medicine (DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa0807646).

        JUPITER was stopped after a median follow-up of 1.9 years, when the independent data monitoring and safety board identified excess events occurring in the placebo arm. The study had been planned to continue for 5 years.

        "Application of the simple screening and treatment strategy tested in the JUPITER trial over a 5-year period could conservatively prevent more than 250,000 heart attacks, strokes, revascularisation procedures, and deaths in the United States alone," Dr. Ridker noted.

        In the JUPITER trial, researchers in 26 countries in North and South America, Europe, Asia, and Africa randomised 17,802 participants into one group of 8,901 subjects receiving rosuvastatin and compared them with a group of 8,901 subjects taking placebo.

        When the study closed, Dr. Ridker said, the analysis found that there was a 54% relative reduction in MI (HR 0.46, 95% CI 0.30 to 0.70, P < .0002); a 48% relative reduction in fatal and nonfatal stroke (HR 0.52, 95% CI 0.34 to 0.79, P < 0.002); and a 47% relative reduction in need for arterial revascularization (HR 0.53, 95% CI 0.40 to 0.70, P < .00001).

        On a precautionary note, patients on rosuvastatin had a higher incidence of physician-reported diabetes (3%) compared with those on placebo (2.4%) (P = .01). Dr. Ridker said similar findings for diabetes had been seen in other statin trials.

        "The JUPITER study expands primary prevention considerably," stated Doug Weaver, MD, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan, who commented on the study during the presentation. He suggested that primary-care physicians, rather than cardiologists, would probably be the clinicians likely to order C-reactive protein testing for patients.

        "If a patient fulfills the criteria -- a man aged over 50 years or a woman over 60 with no symptoms of heart disease and an LDL cholesterol level of less than 130 mg/dL -- a clinician might consider ordering a C-reactive protein test to determine if the level of this marker was elevated (>2 mg/L)," Dr. Weaver explained.

        If it was elevated, he said, treatment with statin therapy could be initiated.

        The JUPITER results indicated that there did not appear to be any safety issues with rosuvastatin; this finding, Dr. Ridker said, "should be reassuring to patients and doctors that these drugs, as a class, are highly effective in preventing what really matters."

        Funding for this study was provided by AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals LP.

        [Presentation title: A Randomized Trial of Rosuvastatin in the Prevention of Cardiovascular Events Among 17,802 Apparently Healthy Men and Women With Elevated Levels of C-Reactive Protein (hsCRP): The JUPITER Trial.]



        E-Mail this DGDispatch to a colleague   To print, use this version






        All contents Copyright (c) 1995-2009 Doctor's Guide Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.



        The NTK initiative. Physicians helping physicians identify Need-To-Know science
           Feedback
        Please rate this article: Strongly DISAGREE...Strongly AGREE NTK logo
        Question 1 - Physicians need to become aware of this information as soon as possible. Question 2 - This information is likely to have an impact on the way physicians practice medicine.
        1
        2
        3
        4
        5
        6
        7
        Send