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Rationale and design of a secondary prevention trial of increasing serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and reducing triglycerides in patients with clinically manifest atherosclerotic heart disease (the Bezafibrate Infarction Prevention Trial)

Authors :
Shimeon Braun
Leornardo Reisin
Elieser Kaplinsky
Yehezkiel Kishon
Michael Flich
Daniel Tzivoni
Libi Sherf
Solomon Behar
Lori Mandelzweig
Monty Zion
Yaacov Friedman
Natalio Kristal
Nathan Roguin
Edward Abinader
Daniel Brunner
Samuel Sclarovsky
Avraham Caspi
Eran Graft
Walter Markiewicz
Tiberio Rosenfeld
Noa Leil
Joshua Weisbort
Henrietta Reicher-Reiss
Abraham Palant
Alon Marmor
Leon Aharon
Daniel David
Babeth Rabinowitz
Jacob Agmon
Zwi Schlesinger
Uri Goldbourt
Izhar Zahavi
Benjamin Pelled
Source :
The American journal of cardiology. 71(11)
Publication Year :
1993

Abstract

Controlled clinical trials have demonstrated the efficacy of reducing the blood levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol in reducing the incidence of coronary artery disease in hypercholesterolemic middle-aged men. However, a similar reversibility of the risk of coronary artery disease has not been demonstrated for high-density lipoprotein cholesterol elevation and triglyceride reduction. Therefore, the effect of administering 400 mg of bezafibrate retard daily versus placebo (double blind) to patients with myocardial infarction preceding randomization by 6 months to 5 years, or a clinically manifest anginal syndrome documented by objective evidence of dynamic myocardial ischemia, or both, is being investigated. Three thousand subjects (aged 45 to 74 years) are being enrolled from 19 cardiac departments in Israel, with total serum cholesterol between 180 and 250 mg/dl, high-density lipoprotein cholesterolor = 45 mg/dl and triglyceridesor = 300 mg/dl. In addition, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations are required to beor = 180 mg/dl (or = 160 mg/dl for patients aged50 years). Patients needing lipid-modifying therapy, exhibitingor = 1 prespecified exclusion criterion or not giving informed consent, or a combination, are not randomized. The primary end points for evaluating efficacy are the incidence of fatal and nonfatal myocardial infarction, and sudden death. The hypothesized effect of bezafibrate administration under the aforementioned protocol is to reduce an estimated cumulative end point event incidence ofor = 15% by 20 to 25% over an average follow-up period of 6.25 years, through early 1998, when the last patient recruited will have completed 5 years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Details

ISSN :
00029149
Volume :
71
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American journal of cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ea7754e2b3d855c57149e42b61684fae