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Long-term Safety and Efficacy of Achieving Very Low Levels of Low-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol : A Prespecified Analysis of the IMPROVE-IT Trial.

AbstractImportance:
In the Improved Reduction of Outcomes: Vytorin Efficacy International Trial, intensive low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C)-reducing therapy with ezetimibe/simvastatin compared with simvastatin alone was associated with a significant reduction in cardiovascular events in 18 144 patients after acute coronary syndrome. The safety of very low LDL-C levels over the long-term is unknown.
Objective:
To assess the safety and clinical efficacy of achieving a very low (<30 mg/dL) level of LDL-C at 1 month using data from the Improved Reduction of Outcomes: Vytorin Efficacy International Trial.
Design, Setting, and Participants:
This prespecified analysis compared outcomes in patients stratified by achieved LDL-C level at 1 month in the Improved Reduction of Outcomes: Vytorin Efficacy International Trial and adjusted for baseline characteristics during 6 years' median follow-up. Patients were enrolled from October 26, 2005, to July 8, 2010, and the data analysis was conducted from December 2014 to February 2017.
Main Outcomes and Measures:
Safety end points included adverse events leading to drug discontinuation; adverse muscle, hepatobiliary, and neurocognitive events; and hemorrhagic stroke, heart failure, cancer, and noncardiovascular death. Efficacy events were as specified in the overall trial.
Results:
Among the 15 281 patients included in the study, 11 645 (76.2%) were men and the median age was 63 years (interquartile range, 56.6-70.7 years). In these patients without an event in the first month, the achieved LDL-C values at 1 month were less than 30 mg/dL, 30 to 49 mg/dL, 50 to 69 mg/dL, and 70 mg/dL or greater in 6.4%, 31%, 36%, and 26% of patients, respectively. Patients with LDL-C values less than 30 mg/dL (median, 25 mg/dL; interquartile range, 21-27 mg/dL) at 1 month were more likely randomized to ezetimibe/simvastatin (85%), had lower baseline LDL-C values, and were more likely older, male, nonwhite, diabetic, overweight, statin naive, and presenting with a first myocardial infarction. After multivariate adjustment, there was no significant association between the achieved LDL-C level and any of the 9 prespecified safety events. The adjusted risk of the primary efficacy composite of cardiovascular death, major coronary events, or stroke was significantly lower in patients achieving an LDL-C level less than 30 mg/dL at 1 month (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.69-0.91; P = .001) compared with 70 mg/dL or greater.
Conclusions and Relevance:
Patients achieving an LDL-C level less than 30 mg/dL at 1 month had a similar safety profile (and numerically the lowest rate of cardiovascular events) over a 6-year period compared with patients achieving higher LDL-C concentrations. These data provide reassurance regarding the longer-term safety and efficacy of the continuation of intensive lipid-lowering therapy in very higher-risk patients resulting in very low LDL-C levels.
Trial Registration:
clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00202878.
AuthorsRobert P Giugliano, Stephen D Wiviott, Michael A Blazing, Gaetano M De Ferrari, Jeong-Gun Park, Sabina A Murphy, Jennifer A White, Andrew M Tershakovec, Christopher P Cannon, Eugene Braunwald
JournalJAMA cardiology (JAMA Cardiol) Vol. 2 Issue 5 Pg. 547-555 (05 01 2017) ISSN: 2380-6591 [Electronic] United States
PMID28291866 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Chemical References
  • Anticholesteremic Agents
  • Cholesterol, LDL
  • Ezetimibe, Simvastatin Drug Combination
Topics
  • Acute Coronary Syndrome (blood, drug therapy)
  • Aged
  • Anticholesteremic Agents (therapeutic use)
  • Cardiovascular Diseases (mortality)
  • Cholesterol, LDL (blood)
  • Double-Blind Method
  • Ezetimibe, Simvastatin Drug Combination (therapeutic use)
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Liver Diseases (epidemiology)
  • Longitudinal Studies
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Multivariate Analysis
  • Muscular Diseases (epidemiology)
  • Myocardial Infarction (blood, drug therapy, epidemiology)
  • Neoplasms (epidemiology)
  • Patient Care Planning
  • Practice Guidelines as Topic
  • Proportional Hazards Models
  • Rhabdomyolysis (epidemiology)
  • Stroke (epidemiology)
  • Treatment Outcome

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