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Clinical Trials
Landmark ACCORD trial finds BP-lipid combination therapy fails to reduce
cardiovascular events
Lowering blood pressure to normal levels –
below currently recommended levels – did
not significantly reduce the combined risk
of fatal or nonfatal cardiovascular disease
events in adults with type 2 diabetes who
were at especially high risk for cardiovascular
disease events, according to new
results from the landmark ‘Action to
Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes’
(ACCORD) clinical trial. Similarly,
treating multiple blood lipids with combination
drug therapy of a fibrate and a
statin did not reduce the combined risk of
cardiovascular disease events more than
treatment with statin alone.
ACCORD is one of the largest studies –
more than 10,000 participants – ever
conducted in adults with type 2 diabetes
who were at especially high risk of cardiovascular
events, such as heart attacks,
stroke, or death from cardiovascular
disease. The multicenter clinical trial
tested three potential strategies to lower
the risk of major cardiovascular events:
intensive control of blood sugar, intensive
control of blood pressure, and treatment of
multiple blood lipids. The lipids targeted
for intensive treatment were high density
lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and triglycerides,
in addition to standard therapy of
lowering low density lipoprotein (LDL)
cholesterol.
The results of the ACCORD blood
pressure and lipid clinical trials were
published online in the 29 April 2010 issue of the New England Journal of
Medicine (NEJM). The results were also
presented in March at the American
College of Cardiology’s 59th annual
scientific session in Atlanta, US. Results
of the ACCORD blood sugar clinical trial
were reported in 2008.
“ACCORD provides important
evidence to help guide treatment recommendations
for adults with type 2 diabetes
who have had a heart attack or stroke or
who are otherwise at especially high risk
for cardiovascular disease,” said Susan B. Shurin, MD, acting director of the US
National Institute of Health’s National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
(NHLBI), the primary sponsor of
ACCORD. “This information provides
guidance to avoid unnecessarily increasing
treatment that provides limited benefit
and potentially increases the risk of
adverse effects.”
ACCORD researchers from 77 medical
centers in the United States and Canada
studied 10,251 participants between the
ages of 40 and 79 who had type 2 diabetes
for an average of 10 years. When they
joined the study, all participants were at
especially high risk of cardiovascular
events because they had pre-existing
cardiovascular disease, evidence of subclinical cardiovascular disease, or at
least two cardiovascular disease risk factors
in addition to diabetes.
All participants were enrolled in the
ACCORD blood sugar treatment clinical
trial and maintained good control of blood
sugar levels during the study. In addition,
participants were enrolled in either the
blood pressure trial or the lipid trial and
were treated and followed for an average of
about five years.
The ACCORD blood pressure trial is
the largest clinical trial to test the effect on
cardiovascular disease of systolic blood
pressure below 120 mmHg, which is
considered normal. Current blood pressure
guidelines recommend that adults with
type 2 diabetes maintain systolic blood
pressure at less than 130 mm Hg. Previous
clinical trials have only proven benefits to
less than 140 mm Hg; however, observational
studies have linked systolic blood
pressure levels of 120 mm Hg or below to
lower cardiovascular disease rates in adults
with type 2 diabetes. A clinical trial was
needed to determine the effects of treatment
to reach this normal systolic blood
pressure level in these patients.
Researchers randomly assigned 4,733
participants with elevated blood pressure to
a target systolic blood pressure of either less
than 120 mmHg (the intensive group) or to
less than 140 mmHg (the standard group).
A variety of FDA-approved blood pressure
medications was used to reach blood pressure
goals. After an average follow-up of
about five years, researchers found no significant
differences between the intensive
group and the standard group in rates of a combined endpoint including nonfatal
heart attack, nonfatal stroke, or cardiovascular
death. There were 208 cardiovascular
events in the intensive group and 237
events in the standard group.
Lowering blood pressure to below the
standard level significantly cut the risk of
stroke by about 40%. The intensive blood
pressure group had 36 strokes, compared to
62 strokes in the standard group. The
researchers caution, however, that participants
in the intensive blood pressure group
were more likely to have complications
such as abnormally low blood pressure or
high levels of blood potassium. They noted
77 events in the intensive groups
compared to 30 in the standard group. In
addition, some laboratory measures of
kidney function were worse in the intensive
therapy group, but there was no difference
in the rates of kidney failure.
“Our results provide no conclusive
evidence that targeting a normal systolic
blood pressure compared with targeting a
systolic blood pressure of less than 140
mmHg lowers the overall risk of major
cardiovascular events in high risk adults
with type 2 diabetes,” said William C.
Cushman, MD, chief of the Preventive
Medicine Section, Veterans Affairs
Medical Center, Memphis, US, and lead
author. “However, the study suggests that
lower blood pressure levels in patients like
those in ACCORD may reduce the risk of
stroke. This finding is consistent with
other blood pressure trials.”
The ACCORD lipid trial studied
whether adding a fibrate to a statin to
improve multiple blood lipids is more effective
at lowering the risk of cardiovascular
events than treatment with a statin alone.
Both statins and fibrates are commonly used
medications to treat abnormal levels of
blood lipids. Statins lower LDL, or bad
cholesterol, and are proven to lower cardiovascular
disease risk in people with diabetes.
Fibrates primarily lower fats in the blood
known as triglycerides and raise HDL or
good cholesterol. Fibrates are sometimes
used in combination with statins. High
triglycerides and low HDL levels are
common in diabetes patients.
ACCORD is the first large clinical trial
to compare the cardiovascular effects of a statin (simvastatin) and placebo, or inactive
pill, to combination therapy of a statin
(simvastatin) and a fibrate (fenofibrate) in
high-risk adults with type 2 diabetes. The
ACCORD lipid trial involved 5,518
participants. Researchers found that,
overall, the combination therapy was safe,
but it did not lower the risk of heart attack,
stroke, or death from cardiovascular
disease more than statins alone.
The researchers noted that participants
who started the study with the lowest
levels of HDL cholesterol plus the highest
levels of triglycerides had lower rates of
cardiovascular events if they received the
combination therapy compared to similar
participants who received only statin
therapy. Although a similar effect has been
seen in other studies, more research is
needed on the effects on this subgroup,
which comprised 17% of the ACCORD
participants. The researchers also found
that men may have benefitted from the
combination lipid therapy whereas women
on combination therapy appeared to have
more cardiovascular problems than those
on statins alone.
“Overall, the results of the ACCORD
lipid trial do not support the use of combination
therapy with a fibrate and a statin
to reduce cardiovascular disease in most
high-risk adults with type 2 diabetes,” said
lead author Henry N. Ginsberg, MD,
director of the Irving Institute for Clinical
and Translational Research at Columbia
University College of Physicians and
Surgeons, New York City. “Although our
analysis suggests that certain patients may
benefit from combination therapy, this
study provides important information that
should spare many people with diabetes
unneeded therapy with fibrates.”
“The lack of benefit from fibrates should
not obscure the proven value of statins in
preventing cardiovascular disease, which is
well established from earlier studies,”
Ginsberg added.
Adults with type 2 diabetes are two to
four times more likely than adults without
diabetes to die from heart disease, and 65%
of deaths in people with diabetes are from
cardiovascular causes.
“These new ACCORD results indicate
that we do not generally need to treat even
more intensively than standard practice,”
said Denise G. Simons-Morton, MD, PhD,
co-author and former NHLBI project
officer for ACCORD. “The treatment
strategies used in the ACCORD standard
control groups have previously been
shown to be effective. So the findings in
no way detract from the important point
that controlling blood pressure and LDL
cholesterol levels reduce cardiovascular
risk – not only in patients with diabetes,
but in all patients with elevated levels.”
The researchers caution that the results
from the ACCORD clinical trial might not
apply to patients who are at lower risk of
cardiovascular disease than the ACCORD
participants or to patients with more
recently diagnosed type 2 diabetes.
Date
of upload: 20th June 2010
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