From the publishers of The New England Journal of Medicine

Save time and stay informed. Our physician-editors offer you clinical perspectives on key research and news.

  1. Home>
  2. Specialties>
  3. Cardiology>
  4. Summary and Comment

Early Lipid Lowering for ACS -- Miraculous or Not?

Is early initiation of statin therapy beneficial for patients with stable coronary heart disease who present with acute coronary syndromes (ACSs)? International investigators conducted a manufacturer-supported, double-blind trial: They randomized 3086 patients with unstable angina or non-Q-wave MI to 16 weeks of either atorvastatin (80 mg/day) or placebo, initiated between 24 and 96 hours (mean, 63) of hospital admission (May 1997 to September 1999). Among the exclusion criteria were these: planned coronary revascularization during initial screening; recent history of Q-wave MI, coronary revascularization, or congestive heart failure (CHF); and total cholesterol level above 270 mg/dL.

Predictably, adjusted mean LDL and triglyceride levels were lower and HDL levels were higher in the treatment group than in the placebo group at 16 weeks. Abnormal liver transaminase levels were significantly more common among drug than among placebo recipients (2.5 percent vs. 0.6 percent).

Incidence of the primary combined endpoint (death, nonfatal MI, resuscitated cardiac arrest, or angina requiring rehospitalization) was significantly lower, but barely so, in the treatment group (14.8 percent vs. 17.4 percent, P=0.048; 95 percent CI, 0.70-1.00). No significant between-groups differences were noted for these individual endpoints -- death, nonfatal MI, resuscitated arrest, revascularizations, CHF requiring rehospitalization -- though the study was not powered to assess all adequately. Atorvastatin recipients did have significantly lower rates of ischemia requiring rehospitalization and stroke than did placebo recipients, but the overall number of strokes was small.

Comment: Although serious adverse events were rare in this study (suggesting that use of statins in acute therapy is safe), borderline results, as well as notable losses of patients to follow-up, compel an editorialist to urge "careful clinical interpretation" of the data. We know that early initiation of statins improves long-term adherence and achievement of target LDL levels, but to mandate in-hospital initiation of statins to reduce ischemic events in ACS patients as a result of this study's findings would be premature.

— JM Foody

Published in Journal Watch Cardiology May 4, 2001

Citation(s):

Schwartz GG et al for the Myocardial Ischemia Reduction with Aggressive Cholesterol Lowering (MIRACL) Study Investigators. Effects of atorvastatin on early recurrent ischemic events in acute coronary syndromes -- The MIRACL study: A randomized controlled trial. JAMA 2001 Apr 4 285 1711-1718.

Sacks FM. Lipid-lowering therapy in acute coronary syndromes. JAMA 2001 Apr 4 285 1758-1760.

Your Remark:

Reader Remarks are intended to encourage lively discussion of clinical topics with your peers in the medical community. Please consider this when composing your remark.

Fields marked with an * are required.

Name as you'd like it to appear:

Submitting a comment indicates you have read and agreed to the remark guidelines and declare:*

PRIVACY: We will not use your email address, submitted for a comment, for any other purpose nor sell, rent, or share your e-mail address with any third parties. Please see our Privacy Policy.

 

CLEAR erases anything you've added in any part of the form. CONTINUE allows you to check your entire post (and edit it if necessary) before submitting.

To ensure that your Reader Remark is not formatted as one long paragraph, precede new paragraphs with either a blank line or an indentation.

Search

Advanced

Article Tools

Reader Remarks

Sign-In

Forgot your password?

New to Journal Watch?

E-mail Alerts

Delivered to your inbox.
Tailored to your interests. Free.

Sign Up Now!

Journal Watch Newsletters

Available in 13 specialties with convenient delivery and 10 free online CME exams.

Subscribe Now!

Copyright © 2001. Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.