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The problem
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Three published [ 1 2 3 ] and one recently presented [ 4
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] randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial have
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unequivocally demonstrated that 3-Hydroxy-3-methylgluatryl
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coenzyme A (HMG CoA) reductase inhibitors (statins) reduce
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the morbidity and mortality associated with coronary
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disease. These trials found that when compared with
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placebo, statins significantly reduced the incidence of
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death, myocardial infarction, unstable angina, percutaneous
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and surgical coronary revascularization, and stroke in
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persons with
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stable coronary disease. Because
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patients who had experienced an acute coronary syndrome
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within three to six months of enrollment were excluded,
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these trials did not assess the effect of lipid-lowering
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therapy on adverse cardiovascular events in those with
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recently
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unstable coronary disease. Whether
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lipid-lowering therapy would provide incremental benefit if
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initiated immediately following an acute coronary syndrome
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is an important issue as the risk of a recurrent adverse
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cardiac events is much greater in patients with unstable
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coronary disease than in the stable setting. The Myocardial
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Ischemia Reduction with Aggressive Cholesterol Lowering
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(MIRACL) trial set out to answer this question.
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The answer?
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MIRACL enrolled 3,086 patients within 24-96 hours (mean
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63 hours) of admission for unstable angina or a non-Q-wave
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myocardial infarction and randomized them to 16 weeks of
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atorvastatin 80 mg or placebo once daily [ 5 ] . The major
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exclusion criteria were: total cholesterol level greater
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than 270 mg/dL; Q-wave myocardial infarction on admission
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or during the previous month; and, coronary
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revascularization in the months before admission, during
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the index hospitalization or anticipated following hospital
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discharge. The primary efficacy endpoint was a composite of
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death, non-fatal myocardial infarction, resuscitated sudden
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cardiac death or emergent rehospitalization for worsening
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symptomatic myocardial ischemia. Secondary endpoints
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included stroke, worsening heart failure, need for coronary
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revascularization and change in lipid levels throughout the
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study. On average, patients were 65 years of age,
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approximately 65% were men, 86% Caucasian and the mean
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baseline low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol level
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was 124 mg/dL. Atorvastatin treatment was associated with a
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2.6% absolute reduction in the risk of the primary endpoint
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(14.8% vs. 17.4%; RR relative risk [RR] 0.84, 95%
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confidence interval [CI] 0.70-1.00, p = 0.048). This
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reduction was primarily driven by the 2.2% absolute
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reduction in incidence of emergent rehospitalization for
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symptomatic myocardial ischemia (6.2% vs. 8.4%; RR 0.74,
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95% CI 0.57-0.95, p = 0.02). The risk of death, nonfatal
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myocardial infarction and resuscitated sudden cardiac death
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were each no different between the two groups. While there
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were no significant differences in the incidence of
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worsening heart failure or need for coronary
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revascularization, atorvastatin did reduce the incidence of
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fatal or non-fatal stroke by 0.8% (0.8% vs. 1.6%; RR 0.50,
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95% CI 0.26-0.99, p = 0.045). Atorvastatin also
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significantly reduced total and LDL cholesterol and
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triglyceride levels but did not significantly change high
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density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol by 16 weeks. By 16
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weeks, the adjusted mean LDL cholesterol decreased to 72
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mg/dL in atorvastatin-treated patients but increased to 135
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mg/dL among placebo-treated patients. No serious adverse
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events occurred as the result of treatment with
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atorvastatin, although reversible liver transaminase
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elevation more than three times the upper limit of normal
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occurred in 2.5% of atorvastatin-treated versus 0.6% of
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placebo-treated patients (p < 0.001).
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The MIRACuLous
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The efficacy and safety findings from MIRACL were unique
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for a number of reasons. Although lipid-lowering therapy
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was associated with a significantly lower mortality when
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initiated early after an acute coronary syndrome in two
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large observational studies [ 6 7 ] , MIRACL was the first
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randomized trial to suggest that statins confer clinical
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benefits in this setting. It was also the first trial to
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identify a short-term (ie, within 16 weeks) clinical
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benefit from statin therapy; in previous secondary
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prevention trials, the benefit of statin therapy was not
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evident for one to two years. And, while clinical trial
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safety endpoints may be considered less glamorous, MIRACL's
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most important contribution may have been that high-dose
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statin therapy was not associated with serious harm,
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despite its use in the unstable setting. Earlier secondary
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prevention statin trials had excluded patients with
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unstable coronary syndromes largely out of theoretical
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concern that statin-mediated reductions in vascular smooth
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muscle cell proliferation might destabilize healing plaque.
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That no harm resulted from this aggressive treatment
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strategy should allay theoretical fears and by doing so
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remove a major obstacle to the inpatient initiation of
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lipid-lowing therapy after coronary events.
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The not so MIRACuLous
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Despite these unique and important findings, there were
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a number of inherent study limitations worth noting. First
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and foremost, the possibility of a null treatment effect
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cannot be ignored given the wide confidence intervals (and
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hence marginally significant p value of 0.048) for the
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effect of atorvastatin on the primary efficacy endpoint.
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Furthermore, while the number of patients lost to follow up
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was small, if adverse events had occurred in those treated
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with atorvastatin (n = 3) but not placebo (n = 8), the
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overall trial results may have been neutral rather than
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positive.
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The types of events prevented in MIRACL are also worth
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noting. While rehospitalization for recurrent myocardial
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ischemia is an important determinant of quality of life and
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health care costs, other important endpoints were not
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significantly affected (eg, death, myocardial infarction,
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resuscitated sudden cardiac death, worsening heart failure,
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need for coronary revascularization, etc). The question of
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whether statins can prevent these and other adverse events
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when initiated soon after an acute coronary syndrome will
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require further study.
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The short duration of follow-up is also particularly
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troubling. While it is impressive that a clinical benefit
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was realized after only 16 weeks of statin therapy, the
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increased risk of adverse clinical events persists
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throughout the year following an acute coronary syndrome.
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Without longer clinical follow up, it is not possible to
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assess the intermediate-term effect (if any) of
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atorvastatin on hard endpoints such as death or myocardial
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infarction. To do so would be critical in light of the lack
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of effect on these important endpoints at 16 weeks.
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Unfortunately, no late clinical follow up is planned.
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There were also a number of limitations that may have
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hampered the study's generalizability. First, patients who
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underwent recent revascularization or in whom it was
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planned were excluded. Specifically, patients who underwent
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percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) or
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coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery within the
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previous three or six months respectively were not eligible
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for inclusion. The investigators reasoned that recurrent
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ischemic events in this population were likely to result
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from restenosis or bypass graft closure and that statins
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would be less likely to affect these processes [ 8 ] .
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Nevertheless, a number of trials have established the
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benefits of statin therapy
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early after coronary
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revascularization [ 9 10 11 ] . Furthermore, a number of
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recent trials have suggested that higher risk patients with
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non-ST elevation acute coronary syndromes fair better when
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an early invasive strategy is applied [ 12 13 14 ] and it
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is not uncommon for patients to be treated in this fashion.
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Second, patients with Q-wave myocardial infarction were not
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eligible for enrollment because it was felt that statins
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would not influence the development of important prognostic
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determinants such as left ventricular systolic dysfunction,
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ventricular arrhythmias or mechanical complications [ 5 ] .
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Nevertheless, patients who develop electrocardiographic
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Q-waves represent a substantial proportion of all patients
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with myocardial infarction. While their short-term risk
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following hospital discharge is lower relative to those
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with a non-Q-wave myocardial infarction, it is still much
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greater than in patients with stable coronary disease, and
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the need for secondary prevention in this population is
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equally important. Third, despite the high risk nature of
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enrolled patients (ie, electrocardiogram [ECG] changes
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and/or other objective evidence of ischemia), the rate of
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platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitor utilization was
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quite low (1.1%). Such therapy appears to be cost effective
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[ 15 16 ] , especially among high risk patients and is
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recommended under current American College of
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Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines [ 17 ] .
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Fourth, it may not be possible to ascertain whether these
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findings apply to all patients with recent acute coronary
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syndromes regardless of baseline lipid levels. The small
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difference in number of primary endpoint events between
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atorvastatin and placebo groups make it difficult to
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dissect the relationship between baseline lipid levels and
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treatment effect further. Consequently, it remains
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uncertain whether one can extrapolate the MIRACL trial
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results to those who undergo coronary revascularization
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shortly before or after a coronary event, who present with
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a Q-wave myocardial infarction, who are treated with
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platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors, or who have
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relatively low admission LDL cholesterol levels.
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Time to change current practice
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Although MIRACL and the two aforementioned cohort
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studies suggest that lipid-lowering agents exert short-term
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clinical benefits when initiated soon after an acute
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coronary syndrome, this remains an open question. Even if
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these findings are not confirmed after further study, one
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could still make a compelling argument that lipid-lowering
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therapy (barring contraindications) should be initiated
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early and universally in patients who present with an acute
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coronary syndrome: First, the long-term safety and
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effectiveness of statins for the secondary prevention of
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stable coronary disease is
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well-established [ 1 2 3 ] ; Second, as evidenced by
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MIRACL, these agents are safe when initiated at the time of
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hospitalization for an acute coronary syndrome; Third, the
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in-hospital initiation of lipid-lowering therapy appears to
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promote greater long-term utilization of these agents [ 18
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19 20 21 ] . Finally, although lipid levels may be
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unreliable in the setting of an acute coronary syndrome
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(excepting total :HDL and LDL:HDL cholesterol ratios [ 22 ]
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) the overwhelming majority of patients with coronary
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disease will ultimately require both pharmacologic and
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non-pharmacologic lipid-lowering interventions to attain
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recommended cholesterol targets [ 23 24 25 ] ; newer
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guidelines are even more stringent [ 26 ] . Furthermore,
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data from the recently presented Heart Protection Study
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suggest that clinical benefits may accrue independent of
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baseline cholesterol level [ 4 ] . Thus, to withhold
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lipid-lowering therapy from patients who present with an
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acute coronary syndrome would be to accept the status quo,
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and to date our efforts at cholesterol lowering in the
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secondary prevention setting have been dismal [ 27 28 ]
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.
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More MIRACLes ahead?
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The ascertainment and quantification of any incremental
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benefit conferred by statin therapy initiated early after
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an acute coronary syndrome will require confirmation. There
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is currently only one ongoing randomized placebo-controlled
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trial of early versus delayed statin therapy in this
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setting, A-2-Z (Aggrastat to Zocor, Merck) [ 29 ] . The
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A-2-Z study is evaluating the efficacy of early treatment
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with simvastatin in 4,500 patients following an episode of
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unstable angina or a non-Q wave myocardial infarction. In
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the first four months, patients will be randomized to
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simvastatin 40 mg daily or placebo. Thereafter, those
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patients treated with simvastatin in the first phase will
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receive 80 mg of simvastatin daily and those treated with
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placebo, 40 mg of simvastatin daily. The primary composite
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endpoint is the occurrence of cardiovascular death,
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non-fatal myocardial infarction, or rehospitalization for
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an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) at one year. If A-2-Z
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demonstrates significant reductions in the incidence of
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adverse events during the first four months, it would
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suggest an incremental clinical benefit from initiating
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these agents early after an acute coronary syndrome. If
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benefits accrue, but do so later during follow up, it would
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be difficult to discriminate between the effects of more
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aggressive vs. earlier lipid lowering therapy.
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The Pravastatin or Atorvastatin Evaluation and Infection
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Therapy (PROVE IT) trial is looking at 4,000 patients
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within 10 days of an acute coronary syndrome and
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randomizing them to either pravastatin 40 mg or
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atorvastatin 80 mg daily [ 29 ] . Patients will be observed
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over at least 1.5 years for the occurrence of myocardial
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infarction or other cardiovascular events. Unlike, MIRACL
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and the A-2-Z trials, this study will not assess the
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efficacy of early statin therapy after an acute coronary
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syndrome; rather, it will examine the role of
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more vs.
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less aggressive lipid-lowering in
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this setting.
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In 2002, many would consider it unethical to withhold
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statins from patients with established coronary disease.
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This makes it unlikely that additional placebo-controlled
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trials will be carried out in this area. Future secondary
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prevention studies should look at patients with stable
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or unstable disease and will need to
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address the comparative efficacy of different statins (or
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newer agents), assess the incremental benefit of
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combination therapy [ 30 ] and determine whether there is a
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serum cholesterol 'floor' below which reductions are
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unlikely to provide further clinical benefit.
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Competing interests
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Dr Aronow has received honoraria as a speaker and
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advisory board member for Pfizer and as a speaker for
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Merck.
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Abbreviations
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HMG CoA = 3-Hydroxy-3-methylgluatryl coenzyme A; MIRACL
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= Myocardial Ischemia Reduction with Aggressive Cholesterol
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Lowering; LDL = low density lipoprotein; RR = relative
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risk; CI = confidence interval; HDL = high density
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lipoprotein; PTCA = percutaneous transluminal coronary
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angioplasty; CABG = coronary artery bypass graft; ECG =
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electrocardiogram; A-2-Z = Aggrastat to Zocor; ACS = acute
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coronary syndrome; PROVE IT = Pravastatin or Atorvastatin
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Evaluation and Infection Therapy.
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