Up to half of all events associated with cardiovascular REVIEW ARTICLE. C-Reactive Protein: A New Risk Assessment Tool for Cardiovascular Disease

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Up to half of all events associated with cardiovascular REVIEW ARTICLE. C-Reactive Protein: A New Risk Assessment Tool for Cardiovascular Disease"

Transcription

1 C-Reactive Protein: A New Risk Assessment Tool for Cardiovascular Disease Michael B. Clearfield, DO Recent research has focused on the use of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-crp), a marker of inflammation, in the detection of patients at increased risk for cardiovascular disease. Several prospective studies have demonstrated that hs-crp is an independent predictor of future risk for cardiovascular events among healthy individuals, as well as among patients with acute coronary syndromes. In addition, because half of all cardiovascular events occur in persons with low to average levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, hs-crp may aid in identifying patients at high risk for a first cardiovascular event who might otherwise be missed by lipid screening alone. Thus, hs-crp is a potential adjunct for global risk assessment in the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Heart Association have therefore proposed joint guidelines for the use of hs-crp in determining cardiovascular disease risk. The author reviews numerous studies examining the prognostic value of hs-crp and outlines ongoing efforts to assess the effect of statin therapy in healthy individuals with low levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and high levels of hs-crp. Up to half of all events associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) are reported to occur in apparently healthy individuals who have few or none of the traditional risk factors, including dyslipidemia.1 As a result, attention has increasingly turned to the role of other factors, such as inflammation, in the development of atherosclerosis and CVD.2,3 These efforts have led to the search for inflammatory biomarkers to improve the detection of coronary and cardiovascular risk among seemingly healthy individuals.4 Prominent among the possible candidates for a clinically useful biomarker of CVD risk is C-reactive protein (CRP) as measured by high-sensitivity (hs) assay.5 This article reviews the evidence to date that hs-crp levels can add important From the University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine (UNTHSC). Address correspondence to Michael B. Clearfield, DO, Department of Internal Medicine, University of North Texas Health Science Center, 3500 Camp Bowie Blvd, Fort Worth, TX mclearfi@hsc.unt.edu prognostic information to patient risk assessment. The article also examines the role of therapy with hydroxymethylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitors (statins) in lowering elevated levels of hs-crp. Methods I searched the United State s National Library of Medicine s MEDLINE database for all relevant English-language studies and clinical trials of C-reactive protein published between January 1990 and February The following Medical Subject Heading terms and keywords were used: randomized, controlled clinical trials, clinical trials, or cohort studies and (+) C- reactive protein, and (+) coronary disease or cardiovascular diseases. These terms were then combined with the following terms: acute coronary syndromes, drug effects, endothelial cells, hydroxymethylglutaryl CoA reductase inhibitors, inflammation, LDL cholesterol, lipoproteins, metabolic syndrome, myocardial infarction, risk factors, and type 2 diabetes mellitus. Review of Studies Examining Prognostic Value of hs-crp Atherosclerosis, Inflammation, and C-Reactive Protein Research over the past decade has led to the current understanding of atherosclerosis as an inflammatory disease that occurs in response to endothelial dysfunction.2,6 The earliest identifiable lesion is the fatty streak, an inflammatory lesion that consists of monocyte-derived macrophages (foam cells) and T lymphocytes.2,6 As a fatty streak progresses to an intermediate and advanced lesion, it forms a fibrous plaque a process that involves a complex interaction between the endothelium, inflammatory cytokines, and numerous blood elements.6 C-reactive protein, an acute-phase reactant synthesized in the liver in response to the cytokine interleukin-6, is also a factor in the development of atherosclerotic plaque. Although CRP was initially believed to be only a marker of vascular inflammation, recent research indicates that it also plays an active role in atherogenesis.7,8 It is detectable in the early stages of plaque development and is believed to be involved throughout the atherogenic process, facilitating everything from the initial recruitment of leukocytes to the arterial wall to the eventual rupture of the plaque.8 Calabro et al9 have proposed that the smooth muscle cells of the human coronary arteries may also produce CRP as a local JAOA Vol 105 No 9 September

2 response to inflammatory cytokines. They further noted that this locally produced CRP may participate in the atherogenic process.9 In addition, Khreiss et al10 have suggested that loss of the pentameric symmetry of CRP can result in a modified or monomeric CRP, which may be the major CRP promoter of the proinflammatory response in the coronary arteries. The recent standardization of the hs-crp assay allows acceptable precision down to and below 0.3 mg per liter. It is within these lower, previously normal ranges, that hs-crp levels seem to have predictive abilities for coronary heart disease (CHD) events.3 C-Reactive Protein as an Independent Risk Factor A number of large, prospective epidemiologic studies have indicated that hs-crp is a strong independent predictor of future cardiovascular events, including myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke, peripheral vascular disease, and sudden cardiac death among individuals without known CVD.5,11 The association between elevated hs-crp levels and future CHD events has generally been consistent among these studies: subjects in the top quartile of hs-crp levels have a 2 to 3 times greater relative risk of a future coronary event than do those in the bottom quartile.8 For example, in a cohort of 1086 apparently healthy middle-aged men in the dataset of the Physicians Health Study, subjects with baseline levels of hs-crp that were in the highest quartile had a twofold increase in risk of ischemic stroke or peripheral vascular disease (P=.02) and a threefold increase in risk of myocardial infarction (P.001), relative to subjects in the lowest quartile.12 These effects were independent of other cardiovascular risk factors, including lipid levels and tobacco use.12 The Honolulu Heart Program analyzed frozen serum samples to assess the relationship of hs-crp to the development of myocardial infarction in clinically healthy men over a follow-up period of 20 years.13 Overall, hs-crp levels in this study were associated with coronary events that occurred as many as 15 years later. As early as five years into follow-up, the risk of myocardial infarction grew with increasing hs-crp levels (P=.009).13 At 10 to 15 years into follow-up, the relative odds of myocardial infarction in the highest hs-crp quartile were 2.1 times that of the lowest quartile, after adjustment for such risk factors as total cholesterol, hypertension, and type 2 diabetes mellitus (P=.016). The strongest correlation between hs-crp and risk of myocardial infarction occurred in those men without other risk factors.13 Levels of hs-crp have also been associated with CVD events in women. In the primary prevention Women s Health Study, 122 initially healthy postmenopausal women who subsequently suffered a first cardiovascular event were paired with 244 controls matched for age and tobacco use who remained CVD event free over a three-year follow-up period.14 Women with the highest baseline hs-crp levels had 5 times greater risk of suffering a vascular event (relative risk [RR], 4.8; 95% confidence interval [CI], ; P.001) and 7 times the risk of myocardial infarction or stroke (RR, 7.3; 95% CI, ; P.001) than did control subjects.14 A more recent analysis from the Women s Health Study reported that in 15,632 women, hs-crp added prognostic information beyond that noted by standard lipid measurements even after adjusting for age, blood pressure, smoking, diabetes mellitus, and obesity.15 Nested case-control analyses of 121,700 women in the Nurses Health Study and 51,529 men in the Health Professionals Follow-up Study recently supported the results of the Women s Health Study, finding that hs-crp is a predictor of CHD that is independent of other cardiovascular risk factors.16 In contrast to the results of these and many other trials, a nested sample of 157 subjects from the Rotterdam Study in 2003 raised concerns about whether hs-crp adds predictive value to traditional risk factors.17 This concern was raised again in 2004 by a cohort study of the Reykjavik trial that questioned the usefulness of CRP over more established risk markers. In this study, 2459 patients diagnosed with CHD after enrollment were matched with 3969 controls who did not have a CHD event.18 After adjustments for smoking status and other established CHD risk factors, patients whose baseline hs-crp levels were in the top tertile (cutoff value=2.0 mg/l) had an odds ratio for CHD of 1.45 (95% CI, ) compared with those in the bottom tertile (cutoff value=0.78 mg/l).18 The Reykjavik investigators concluded that hs-crp added only marginally to the predictive value of established risk factors.18 However, the adjusted odds ratio of 1.45 for elevated hs-crp in this study should be considered in the context of other odds ratios reported in the same group of patients: 1.87 for individuals who were current smokers versus those who had never smoked, and 1.50 for individuals with elevated systolic blood pressure versus those with normal blood pressure.18 Because the increased risk associated with elevated hs- CRP was comparable to that of well-established CVD risk factors, this study confirmed the value of hs-crp as a strong, independent predictor of future heart disease.18 Providing additional support for the predictive value of hs-crp, the Cardiovascular Health Study evaluated protein levels in an elderly population without a history of vascular disease.19 In this study of 3971 men and women aged 65 years or older, a single instance of elevated hs-crp levels was associated with an increased 10-year risk of CHD beyond traditional risk factors, especially in moderate high-risk men and in high-risk women. C-Reactive Protein With Established Coronary Heart Disease Elevated hs-crp has been shown to be a strong predictor of future cardiovascular risk in patients with established CHD, with or without a previous myocardial infarction. In the Scandinavian Simvastatin Survival Study, elevated hs-crp levels predicted mortality in patients with stable ischemic heart disease.20 Patients in the highest quartile for hs-crp levels had the highest risk of death, compared with those in the first through 410 JAOA Vol 105 No 9 September 2005

3 < >3.0 < > C-Reactive Protein (mg/l) 3 C-Reactive Protein (mg/l) Relative Risk Multivariable Relative Risk Framingham Estimate of 10-Year Risk (%) 0 < >160 LDL Cholesterol (mg/dl) Figure 1. High-sensitivity C-reactive protein adds prognostic information on vascular risk at all levels of the Framingham Risk Score (left) and all levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol (right). (Adapted from Ridker PM, for the JUPITER Study Group. Rosuvastatin in the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease among patients with low levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and elevated high-sensitivity C-reactive protein: Rationale and design of the JUPITER trial [review].circulation. 2003;108[19]: ) third quartiles (odds ratio=2.51; 95% CI, ).20 Furthermore, Blake and Ridker7 have shown that elevated hs-crp can predict risk of cardiovascular events (including death, acute myocardial infarction, and need for revascularization procedures) in patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS). C-Reactive Protein and Thromboembolic Stroke In addition to having prognostic value for coronary events, hs-crp has also been shown to be a predictor of thromboembolic stroke in middle-aged, healthy men. Findings from the Honolulu Heart Program suggest a positive correlation between hs-crp levels and risk of stroke over a follow-up period of 20 years. For the first five years of the study, the relationship was modest. By 10 to 15 years into follow-up, however, there was an almost fourfold difference in risk among men in the highest hs-crp quartile versus those in the lowest quartile (P.001). The risk of stroke increased significantly with higher hs-crp levels in middle-aged men ( 55 years; P=.006), men without a history of hypertension or diabetes (P.05), and in nonsmokers (P.001).21 C-Reactive Protein, Diabetes Mellitus, and the Metabolic Syndrome Recent evidence suggests that hs-crp plays a major role in the physiologic processes associated with the metabolic syndrome.5 High levels of hs-crp have been shown to be an independent predictor of cardiovascular risk for all degrees of severity of the metabolic syndrome.22 Furthermore, elevated hs-crp has been correlated with abdominal obesity in men with atherogenic dyslipidemia, an important clinical characteristic of the metabolic syndrome.23 Several studies demonstrate that hs-crp can be used to predict the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus. In a cohort of the Women s Health Study, the relative risk of developing diabetes among women in the highest versus lowest quartiles of hs-crp levels was 15.7 (95% CI, ).24 Elevated levels of hs-crp remained a significant predictor of diabetes risk even after adjusting for body mass index, family history of diabetes mellitus, smoking, and other factors.24 Another cross-sectional trial of participants in the Women s Health Study correlated hs-crp with insulin resistance in JAOA Vol 105 No 9 September

4 Relative Risk First Myocardial Infarction Figure 2. Relative risks of first myocardial infarction among apparently healthy men associated with high ( 223 mg/dl), medium ( mg/dl), and low ( 191 mg/dl) tertiles of total cholesterol and high ( 1.69 mg/l), medium ( mg/l), and low ( 0.72 mg/l) tertiles of high-sensitivity C- reactive protein (CRP). Those men in the highest tertile of both total cholesterol and CRP had 5.3 times the relative risk of a first myocardial infarction than those in the lowest tertiles of total cholesterol or CRP (P=.0001). (Adapted from Ridker PM, Glynn RJ, Hennekens CH. C-reactive protein adds to the predictive value of total and HDL cholesterol in determining risk of first myocardial infarction. Circulation. 1998;97[20]: ) nondiabetic women, providing additional evidence for the association between subclinical inflammation and the risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus and CVD.25 The odds ratio for having elevated fasting insulin increased with each tertile of hs-crp. The odds ratio for the highest versus lowest tertile of hs-crp was 4.4 (95% CI, ).25 Similarly, the West of Scotland Coronary Prevention Study indicated that high hs-crp levels are an independent predictor for future diagnosis of type 2 diabetes mellitus in healthy middle-aged men.26 Patients in the highest hs-crp quintile ( 4.18 mg/l) in this study had more than a threefold increased risk of diabetes mellitus after five years (95% CI, ).26 Finally, elevated hs-crp was an independent predictor of diabetes mellitus and the metabolic syndrome in women in the Mexico City Diabetes Study.27 Compared with women in the lowest hs-crp tertile, women in the highest tertile had a relative risk of 4.0 of the metabolic syndrome developing (95% CI, ) and a relative risk of 5.5 of type 2 diabetes mellitus developing (95% CI, ).27 Using hs-crp Values for Risk Assessment C-Reactive Protein Adds to Global Risk Scoring Using traditional risk factors, clinicians can predict approximately 50% to 60% of the variation in the absolute risk of a future coronary event in individual patients.28 The addition of hs-crp to current strategies for global risk assessment, such as the Framingham Risk Score (FRS), may therefore have the potential to increase the accuracy of cardiovascular risk prediction (Figure 1). Albert et al29 demonstrated that hs-crp levels are correlated with the calculated 10-year FRS in men, as well as in women not taking hormone replacement therapy. Data from the Augsburg cohort of the Monitoring Trends and Determinants in Cardiovascular Disease (MONICA) study also showed that hs-crp enhances the assessment of global coronary risk as measured by the FRS, particularly in persons at intermediate risk for CHD.30 In the Women s Health Study, both very low ( 0.5 mg/l) and very high ( 10 mg/l) levels of hs-crp were useful for risk prediction across a full range of FRS.31 Women with hs-crp levels of less than 0.5 mg per liter had the lowest risk of future cardiovascular events. Women with hs-crp levels of greater than 20 mg per liter had a risk almost 8 times higher (crude RR, 7.6; 95% CI, ) than the women at lowest risk.31 C-Reactive Protein Adds to Value of Lipid Profile The addition of hs-crp levels to standard cholesterol evaluation protocols improves clinicians abilities to predict CVD risk.5,1 In the Physicians Health Study, hs-crp added to the predictive value of lipid parameters for determining future risk of myocardial infarction.32 Men with high levels of both hs-crp and total cholesterol had a 5.3 times greater relative risk of a future myocardial infarction (P.001) than did men with either high total cholesterol or high hs-crp levels alone (Figure 2).32 Measurement of hs-crp in the Women s Health Study added predictive value to all low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) cutoff points, as defined in the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) Adult Treatment Panel (ATP) III guidelines.33,34 Furthermore, women with high hs-crp and low LDL-C levels had a higher absolute risk of a future CVD event than did women with low hs-crp and high LDL-C levels, despite the fact that high LDL-C is traditionally targeted for aggressive intervention in primary prevention (Figure 3).33,34 Levels of LDL-C and hs-crp were minimally cor- 412 JAOA Vol 105 No 9 September 2005

5 Figure 3. Event-free survival among women with high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (CRP) and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels above or below the population median values. (Reprinted from Ridker PM, Rifai N, Rose L, Buring JE, Cook NR. Comparison of C-reactive protein and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels in the prediction of first cardiovascular events. N Engl J Med. 2002;347: Copyright 2002 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.) related in the study (r=0.08), suggesting that each level predicted risk in different groups.33 Guidelines for Use of hs-crp in Risk Assessment In January 2003, joint guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the American Heart Association (AHA) named hs-crp as the inflammatory marker of choice to assess cardiovascular risk.3 The guidelines support the use of hs-crp in primary prevention and set cutoff points according to relative risk categories: low risk ( 1.0 mg/l), average risk ( mg/l), and high risk ( 3.0 mg/l).3 These cutoff points approximate the tertiles of hs-crp observed in the adult population. Recently, Ridker and Cook31 suggested that the scope of hs-crp values be extended from less than 0.5 mg per liter (very low) to greater than 10 mg per liter (very high). This extension of scope would provide clinicians with additional prognostic information on cardiovascular risk. The joint CDC-AHA guidelines state that the optimal use of hs-crp is to help guide the evaluation and therapy for primary CHD prevention for patients at intermediate risk, as defined by NCEP ATP III (10% 20% CHD risk over 10 years).3,34 The joint guidelines also consider measurements of hs-crp as a possible predictor of recurrent events in patients with stable coronary disease or ACS.3 The use of hs-crp as an adjunct to lipid screening in primary prevention is intended to improve global risk prediction in patients not clearly identified as being at high risk by cholesterol levels alone.5 This adjustment to the screening procedure is especially important for individuals with low LDL-C levels ( 130 mg/dl) but high hs-crp levels ( 3 mg/l), an often-overlooked high-risk group. Preliminary data suggest that patients with low LDL-C and high hs-crp levels may benefit from pharmacologic intervention, preferably with statin therapy.3 In the NCEP ATP III guidelines, hs-crp was included among the emerging risk factors whose presence might affect clinician recommendations for therapeutic options.34 Relationship Between Statin Therapy and hs-crp Statins, C-Reactive Protein, and Coronary Risk Clinical trials have shown that statins reduce patient levels of CRP by 15% to 28% as early as six weeks after treatment begins, independent of the magnitude of reduction in LDL-C levels Data from a posthoc analysis of the secondary prevention Cholesterol and Recurrent Events (CARE) trial suggest that risk reduction of coronary events is greatest among patients with high baseline levels of hs-crp.38 In this analysis, the risk reduction attributable to pravastatin therapy among patients with high levels of hs-crp and another marker of inflammation, serum amyloid A (SAA), was substantially greater (54%) than in patients with lower levels of hs-crp and SAA (25%). This finding held true even though total cholesterol, LDL-C, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), and triglyceride levels were almost identical in the two groups.38 In the primary prevention Air Force/Texas Coronary Atherosclerosis Prevention Study (AFCAPS/TexCAPS), a posthoc analysis found that lovastatin prevented first major acute coronary events among patients with above-median hs-crp levels and a below-median total cholesterol-to-hdl- C ratio (P=.02).37 In addition, the risk of future vascular events JAOA Vol 105 No 9 September

6 was as great among the patients with low LDL-C and high hs-crp levels as it was among patients with high LDL-C levels.4 Several recent studies have evaluated the ability of statins to reduce hs-crp in individuals with ACS. In the Myocardial Ischemia Reduction with Aggressive Cholesterol Lowering (MIRACL) study, atorvastatin (80 mg) significantly reduced CRP by 83%, versus 74% (P.001) with placebo, at 16 weeks.39 In the Pravastatin or Atorvastatin Evaluation and Infection Therapy Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction 22 (PROVE IT TIMI 22) trial, which compared aggressive lipid lowering with atorvastatin (80 mg) versus moderate lipid lowering with pravastatin (40 mg), atorvastatin reduced hs-crp and LDL-C levels 38% and 35% more, respectively, than pravastatin.40 In addition, there was a resultant statistically significant 16% reduction (P=.005) in cardiovascular events at two years.40 Phase Z of the A to Z trial compared two simvastatin protocols for two years.41 One group in this trial received simvastatin, 40 mg, for one month and simvastatin, 80 mg, thereafter, while the other group received placebo for four months, then simvastatin, 20 mg, thereafter.41 The differences observed between these two treatment groups were smaller in both hs-crp (17%) and LDL-C (18%) than were the corresponding differences observed in either the MIRACL or PROVE IT TIMI 22 trials. These small differences may explain the lower cardiovascular event reduction 11% (P=.14) recorded in the A to Z trial.41 An important aspect of many of the recent hs-crp studies in patients with ACS has been the observed correlation between more powerful LDL-C lowering and greater reductions in hs-crp. This relationship was demonstrated again in the REVERSing Atherosclerosis with Aggressive Lipid Lowering (REVERSAL) study, in which atorvastatin, 80 mg, lowered LDL-C by 46.3% (versus 25.2% with pravastatin, 40 mg) and hs-crp by 36.4% (versus 5.2% with pravastatin, 40 mg; P.001 for both).42 Similarly, in the 16-week ANDROMEDA study43 of 509 patients, rosuvastatin, which was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in August 2003, was shown to lower hs-crp levels by 34% and 40% at doses of 10 mg and 20 mg, respectively. These results compared with observed reductions of 21% and 34% with atorvastatin, 10 mg and 20 mg, respectively.43 Lowering hs-crp With Statins to Reduce Coronary Risk In a recent analysis of 2924 patients presenting with stable or unstable angina or acute myocardial infarction requiring hospitalization and coronary artery catheterization, patients with significant coronary artery disease (coronary artery stenosis 70% in 1 or more coronary arteries) were stratified by baseline hs-crp levels and observed for an average of 2.4 years to determine the effect of hs-crp on timing and degree of benefit of statin therapy.44 Patients with baseline hs-crp levels greater or equal to 12 mg per liter who were prescribed statin therapy at hospital discharge derived both a larger and significantly earlier (within two months) survival benefit from statins than did patients with hs-crp levels less than 12 mg per liter. In those patients in the highest tertile of baseline hs-crp ( 17 mg/l), statin therapy conferred benefit as early as one week, compared with approximately two years in patients with baseline hs-crp levels in the lowest tertile ( 12 mg/l).44 In another retrospective analysis of patients presenting with ACS, Saab et al45 noted that patients treated with statins within 24 hours of presentation had a lower incidence of death, stroke, reinfarction, and heart failure than those whose statin therapy was delayed more than 24 hours. In the statin studies of patients with ACS discussed in this review, lower levels of both LDL-C and hs-crp were achieved in the more aggressively treated groups. Some investigators have speculated though they have not yet confirmed that the lowering of hs-crp will confer additional benefits in decreasing cardiovascular events beyond that seen with LDL-C lowering alone.42 In fact, in a re-analysis of the PROVE IT TIMI 22 trial, patients who achieved the dual target of LDL-C levels less than 70 mg per deciliter and hs-crp levels less than 1 mg per liter achieved the largest event reduction.46 Moreover, patients who achieved an LDL-C level less than 70 mg per deciliter but whose hs-crp level remained greater than 2 mg per liter had a similar event reduction to those whose LDL-C was greater than 70 mg per deciliter and whose hs-crp was less than 2 mg per liter. The reduction of both hs-crp and LDL-C below the median values was also significantly associated with slower progression rates of atherosclerosis in a re-analysis of the REVERSAL trial.47 JUPITER May Answer Remaining Questions Many treatment modalities, in addition to statins, have been shown to lower hs-crp levels. Among these are exercise, weight loss, multivitamins, fibrates, niacin, and thiazolidinediones.3,48,49 However, none of these modalities have correlated changes in hs-crp with CHD event reduction, as has been suggested with statins. Research has established hs-crp as an independent marker for CHD, but whether lowering elevated levels of hs-crp will reduce cardiovascular events has yet to be firmly established. Moreover, a number of other questions require further investigation. For example, should future guidelines for reducing cardiovascular risk include goals for hs-crp levels that are independent of LDL-C levels? And should there be additional treatment strategies for individuals who have achieved their LDL-C goals but still exhibit elevated hs-crp? The Justification for the Use of Statins in Primary Prevention: an Intervention Trial Evaluating Rosuvastatin (JUPITER) is the first large-scale, prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled trial specifically designed to address these questions.4 JUPITER, which commenced subject enrollment in February 2003, is designed to assess whether long-term, aggressive daily LDL-C-lowering therapy with rosuvastatin, 20 mg, reduces the rate of first major cardiovascular events in indi- 414 JAOA Vol 105 No 9 September 2005

7 viduals with LDL-C levels less than 130 mg per deciliter and hs-crp levels greater than or equal to 2 mg per liter. Rosuvastatin has previously been shown to produce greater LDL- C reductions than milligram-equivalent or higher doses of other statins.50 Full enrollment for JUPITER is expected to include 15,000 men and women aged 55 years or older and 65 years or older, respectively. Subjects will be randomized to either rosuvastatin or placebo and will be followed for three to four years to observe the combined endpoints of cardiovascular death, stroke, myocardial infarction, hospitalization for unstable angina pectoris, or arterial revascularization.4 As a secondary endpoint, JUPITER will investigate whether rosuvastatin reduces the incidence of type 2 diabetes mellitus.4 The results of JUPITER are expected to provide crucial information on whether the risk of a first CVD event in individuals with low LDL-C levels but high hs-crp levels can be decreased with aggressive statin therapy. Because as many as 30 million people in the United States are in this often-overlooked high-risk group,51 the results of the JUPITER study could have a dramatic effect on clinical practice in prevention of CVD. Conclusions High-sensitivity C-reactive protein, a marker of inflammation, is a strong predictor of future cardiovascular events in individuals both with and without overt CVD. Recent trials have suggested that hs-crp may assist in stratifying risk in patients presenting with coronary artery disease, particularly those with ACS. Further studies examining hs-crp levels may help elucidate new therapeutic strategies for the secondary prevention of CVD. High-sensitivity C-reactive protein also adds prognostic information to the calculated FRS in individuals without overt coronary disease. When combined with lipid screening, hs-crp improves global risk prediction in patients who would otherwise not be identified for primary prevention by lipid assessment alone. Although statin therapy has been shown to benefit individuals with elevated hs-crp levels, it is not known whether aggressive statin therapy can reduce the risk of a first cardiovascular event in persons with low LDL-C but high hs-crp. The ongoing JUPITER trial is the first major randomized, controlled trial to assess the effects of statin therapy on the risk of a first cardiovascular event in such subjects. A positive outcome in JUPITER would provide strong evidence supporting the use of statin therapy for the 25 million to 30 million Americans who fall outside the current NCEP ATP III treatment guidelines. This outcome would represent a tremendous step forward in CHD prevention. Finally, preliminary data suggest that lowering hs-crp levels may evolve as a separate, distinct therapeutic goal. However, additional prospective randomized trials are needed before targeted treatment to lower hs-crp levels to a specific range can be endorsed. References 1. Ridker PM. Cardiology Patient Page. C-reactive protein: a simple test to help predict risk of heart attack and stroke. Circulation. 2003;108:e81 e85. Available at: Accessed August 1, Farmer JA, Torre-Amione G. Atherosclerosis and inflammation [review]. Curr Atheroscler Rep. 2002;4: Pearson TA, Mensah GA, Hong Y, Smith SC Jr, for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Heart Association Workshop on Markers of Inflammation and Cardiovascular Disease. CDC/AHA workshop on markers of inflammation and cardiovascular disease: application to clinical and public health practice: overview. Circulation. 2004; 110:e Available at: 4. Ridker PM, for the JUPITER Study Group. Rosuvastatin in the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease among patients with low levels of lowdensity lipoprotein cholesterol and elevated high-sensitivity C-reactive protein: Rationale and design of the JUPITER trial [review].circulation. 2003;108: Available at: full/108/19/ Ridker PM. Clinical application of C-reactive protein for cardiovascular disease detection and prevention [review]. Circulation. 2003;107: Available at: Accessed August 3, Ross R. Atherosclerosis: An inflammatory disease [review]. N Engl J Med. 1999;340: Blake GJ, Ridker PM. C-reactive protein and other inflammatory risk markers in acute coronary syndromes [review]. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2003; 41(4 Suppl S):37S 42S. 8. Ridker PM, Bassuk SS, Toth PP. C-reactive protein and risk of cardiovascular disease: Evidence and clinicial application [review]. Curr Atheroscler Rep. 2003;5: Calabro P, Willerson JT, Yeh ETH. Inflammatory cytokines stimulated C-reactive protein production by human coronary artery smooth muscle cells. Circulation. 2003;108: Available at: Khreiss T, Jozsef L, Potempa LA, Filep JG. Conformational rearrangement in C-reactive protein is required for proinflammatory actions on human endothelial cells. Circulation. 2004;109: Available at: Ridker PM. High-sensitivity C-reactive protein: Potential adjunct for global risk assessment in the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease. Circulation. 2001;103: Available at: Ridker PM, Cushman M, Stampfer MJ, Tracy RP, Hennekens CH. Inflammation, aspirin, and the risk of cardiovascular disease in apparently healthy men. N Engl J Med. 1997;336: Sakkinen P, Abbott RD, Curb JD, Rodriguez BL, Yano K, Tracy RP. C- reactive protein and myocardial infarction. J Clin Epidemiol. 2002;55: Ridker PM, Buring JE, Shih J, Matias M, Hennekens CH. Prospective study of C-reactive protein and the risk of future cardiovascular events among apparently healthy women. Circulation. 1998;98: Available at: Ridker PM, Rifai N, Bradwin G, Buring JE. Non-HDL cholesterol, apolipoproteins A-l and B100, standard lipid measures, lipid ratios, and CRP as risk factors for cardiovascular disease in women. JAMA. 2005;294: Pai JK, Pischon T, Ma J, Manson JE, Hankinson SE, Joshipura K, et al. Inflammatory markers and the risk of coronary heart disease in men and women. N Engl J Med. 2004;351: van der Meer IM, de Maat MP, Kiliaan AJ, van der Kuip DA, Hofman A, Witteman JC. The value of C-reactive protein in cardiovascular risk prediction: the Rotterdam Study. Arch Intern Med. 2003;163: Danesh J, Wheeler JG, Hirschfield GM, Eda S, Eiriksdottir G, Rumley A, et al. C-reactive protein and other circulating markers of inflammation in the prediction of coronary heart disease. N Engl J Med. 2004;350: Cushman M, Arnold AM, Psaty BM, Manolio TA, Kuller LH, Burke GL, Polak JF, Tracy RP. C-reactive protein and the 10-year incidence of coronary heart disease in older men and women. Circulation. 2005;112: JAOA Vol 105 No 9 September

8 20. Crea F, Monaco C, Lanza GA, Maggi E, Ginnetti F, Cianflone D, et al. Inflammatory predictors of mortality in the Scandinavian Simvastatin Survival Study. Clin Cardiol. 2002;25: Curb JD, Abbott RD, Rodriquez BL, Sakkinen P, Popper JS, Yano K, et al. C-reactive protein and the future risk of thromboembolic stroke in healthy men. Circulation. 2003;107: Available at: Ridker PM, Buring JE, Cook NR, Rifai N. C-reactive protein, the metabolic syndrome, and risk of incident cardiovascular events: an 8-year follow-up of 14,719 initially healthy American women. Circulation. 2003;107: Available at: Accessed August 3, Lemieux I, Pascot A, Prud homme D, Alméras N, Bogaty P, Nadeau A, et al. Elevated C-reactive protein: another component of the atherothrombotic profile of abdominal obesity. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2001;21: Available at: Accessed August 3, Pradhan AD, Manson JE, Rifai N, Buring JE, Ridker PM. C-reactive protein, interleukin 6, and risk of developing type 2 diabetes mellitus. JAMA. 2001;286: Pradhan AD, Cook NR, Buring JE, Manson JE, Ridker PM. C-reactive protein is independently associated with fasting insulin in nondiabetic women. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2003;23: Available at: Freeman DJ, Norrie J, Caslake MJ, Gaw A, Ford I, Lowe GD, et al, for the West of Scotland Coronary Prevention Study. C-reactive protein is an independent predictor of risk for the development of diabetes in the West of Scotland Coronary Prevention Study. Diabetes. 2002;51: Available at: Accessed August 3, Han TS, Sattar N, Williams K, Gonzalez-Villalpando C, Lean MEJ, Haffner SM. Prospective study of C-reactive protein in relation to the development of diabetes and metabolic syndrome in the Mexico City Diabetes Study. Diabetes Care. 2002;25: Available at: Rader DJ. Inflammatory markers of coronary risk. N Engl J Med. 2000;343: Albert MA, Glynn RJ, Ridker PM. Plasma concentration of C-reactive protein and the calculated Framingham coronary heart disease risk score. Circulation. 2003;108: Available at: Koenig W, Lowel H, Baumert J, Meisinger C. C-reactive protein modulates risk prediction based on the Framingham score: implications for future risk assessment: results from a large cohort study in southern Germany. Circulation. 2004;109: Epub 2004 March 15. Available at: Ridker PM, Cook N. Clinical usefulness of very high and very low levels of C-reactive protein across the full range of Framingham risk scores. Circulation. 2004;109: Available at: Ridker PM, Glynn RJ, Hennekens CH. C-reactive protein adds to the predictive value of total and HDL cholesterol in determining risk of first myocardial infarction. Circulation. 1998;97: Available at: Ridker PM, Rifai N, Rose L, Buring JE, Cook NR. Comparison of C-reactive protein and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels in the prediction of first cardiovascular events. N Engl J Med. 2002;347: National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults (Adult Treatment Panel III). Third report of the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults (Adult Treatment Panel III) final report. Circulation. 2002;106: Available at: Accessed August 1, Jialal I, Stein D, Balis D, Grundy SM, Adams-Huet B, Devaraj S. Effect of hydroxymethyl glutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitor therapy on high sensitive C-reactive protein levels. Circulation. 2001;103: Available at: Albert MA, Danielson E, Rifai N, Ridker PM, for the PRINCE Investigators. Effect of statin therapy on C-reactive protein levels: the Pravastatin Inflammation/CRP Evaluation (PRINCE): a randomized trial and cohort study. JAMA. 2001;286: Ridker PM, Rifai N, Clearfield M, Downs JR, Weis SE, Miles JS, et al, for the Air Force/Texas Coronary Atherosclerosis Prevention Study Investigators. Measurement of C-reactive protein for the targeting of statin therapy in the primary prevention of acute coronary events. N Engl J Med. 2001;344: Available at: Accessed August 3, Ridker PM, Rifai N, Pfeffer MA, Sacks FM, Moye LA, Goldman S, et al, for the Cholesterol and Recurrent Events (CARE) Investigators. Inflammation, pravastatin, and the risk of coronary events after myocardial infarction in patients with average cholesterol levels. Circulation. 1998;98: Available at: Accessed August 3, Kinlay S, Schwartz GG, Olsson AG, Rifai N, Leslie SJ, Sasiela WJ, et al, for the Myocardial Ischemia Reduction with Aggressive Cholesterol Lowering Study Investigators. High-dose atorvastatin enhances the decline in inflammatory markers in patients with acute coronary syndromes in the MIRACL study. Circulation. 2003;108: Available at: Cannon CP, Braunwald E, McCabe CH, Rader DJ, Rouleau JL, Belder R, et al, for the Pravastatin or Atorvastatin Evaluation and Infection Therapy Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction 22 Investigators. Intensive versus moderate lipid lowering with statins after acute coronary syndromes. N Engl J Med. 2004;350: de Lemos JA, Blazing MA, Wiviott SD, Lewis EF, Fox KA, White HD, et al, for the A to Z Investigators. Early intensive vs a delayed conservative simvastatin strategy in patients with acute coronary syndromes: phase Z of the A to Z trial. JAMA. 2004;292: Nissen SE, Tuzcu EM, Schoenhagen P, Brown BG, Ganz P, Vogel RA, et al, for the REVERSAL Investigators. Effect of intensive compared with moderate lipid-lowering therapy on progression of coronary atherosclerosis: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 2004;291: Betteridge DJ, Gibson M, on behalf of the ANDROMEDA Investigators. Effect of rosuvastatin and atorvastatin on LDL-C and CRP levels in patients with type 2 diabetes: results of the ANDROMEDA study [abstract]. Atherosclerosis. 2004;5(Suppl 1): Muhlestein JB, Anderson JL, Horne BD, Carlquist JF, Bair TL, Bunch TJ, et al, for the Intermountain Heart Collaborative Study Group. Early effects of statins in patients with coronary artery disease and high C-reactive protein. Am J Cardiol. 2004;94: Saab FA, Eagle KA, Kline-Rogers E, Fang J, Otten R, Mukherjee D, for the Michigan Cardiovascular Outcomes Research and Reporting Program of the University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center. Comparison of outcomes in acute coronary syndrome in patients receiving statins within 24 hours of onset versus at later times. Am J Cardiol. 2004;94: Ridker PM, Cannon CP, Morrow D, Rifai N, Rose LM, McGabe CH, et al, for the Pravastatin or Atorvastatin Evaluation and Infection Therapy Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction 22 (PROVE IT TIMI 22) Investigators. C-reactive protein levels and outcomes after statin therapy. N Engl J Med. 2005;352: Nissen SE, Tuzcu EM, Schoenhagen P, Crowe T, Sasiela WJ, Tsai J, et al, for the REVERSAL Investigators. Statin therapy, LDL cholesterol, C-reactive protein, and coronary artery disease. N Engl J Med. 2005;352: Yki-Järvinen H. Thiazolidinediones [review]. N Engl J Med. 2004;351: Church TS, Earnest CP, Wood KA, Kampert JB. Reduction of C-reactive protein levels through use of a multivitamin. Am J Med. 2003;115: Jones PH, Davidson MH, Stein EA, Bays HE, McKenney JM, Miller E, et al; STELLAR Study Group. Comparison of the efficacy and safety of rosuvastatin versus atorvastatin, simvastatin, and pravastatin across doses (STELLAR* Trial). Am J Cardiol. 2003;92: Ridker PM. Should statin therapy be considered for patients with elevated C-reactive protein? The need for a definitive clinical trial [editorial]. Eur Heart J. 2001;22: Available at: org/cgi/reprint/22/23/2135. Accessed August 1, JAOA Vol 105 No 9 September 2005

Many asymptomatic individuals

Many asymptomatic individuals Facts, myths and misconceptions about LDL-C and HDL-C By Michael B. Clearfield, DO Many asymptomatic individuals will succumb to cardiovascular disease (CVD), which is the leading cause of death and loss

More information

Using C-reactive protein to assess cardiovascular disease risk

Using C-reactive protein to assess cardiovascular disease risk REVIEW CME CREDIT MEHDI H. SHISHEHBOR, DO Department of Internal Medicine, The Cleveland Clinic DEEPAK L. BHATT, MD Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, The Cleveland Clinic ERIC J. TOPOL, MD Chairman,

More information

Statins and Risk for Diabetes Mellitus. Background

Statins and Risk for Diabetes Mellitus. Background Statins and Risk for Diabetes Mellitus Kevin C. Maki, PhD, FNLA Midwest Center for Metabolic & Cardiovascular Research and DePaul University, Chicago, IL 1 Background In 2012 the US Food and Drug Administration

More information

Statins for Hyperlipidemia (High Cholesterol)

Statins for Hyperlipidemia (High Cholesterol) Statins for Hyperlipidemia (High Cholesterol) Examples of statin drugs Brand Name Mevacor Pravachol Zocor Lescol, Lescol XL Lipitor Crestor Chemical Name lovastatin pravastatin sodium simvastatin fluvastatin

More information

Your Life Your Health Cariodmetabolic Risk Syndrome Part VII Inflammation chronic, low-grade By James L. Holly, MD The Examiner January 25, 2007

Your Life Your Health Cariodmetabolic Risk Syndrome Part VII Inflammation chronic, low-grade By James L. Holly, MD The Examiner January 25, 2007 Your Life Your Health Cariodmetabolic Risk Syndrome Part VII Inflammation chronic, low-grade By James L. Holly, MD The Examiner January 25, 2007 The cardiometabolic risk syndrome is increasingly recognized

More information

ROLE OF LDL CHOLESTEROL, HDL CHOLESTEROL AND TRIGLYCERIDES IN THE PREVENTION OF CORONARY HEART DISEASE AND STROKE

ROLE OF LDL CHOLESTEROL, HDL CHOLESTEROL AND TRIGLYCERIDES IN THE PREVENTION OF CORONARY HEART DISEASE AND STROKE ROLE OF LDL CHOLESTEROL, HDL CHOLESTEROL AND TRIGLYCERIDES IN THE PREVENTION OF CORONARY HEART DISEASE AND STROKE I- BACKGROUND: Coronary artery disease and stoke are the major killers in the United States.

More information

MANAGEMENT OF LIPID DISORDERS: IMPLICATIONS OF THE NEW GUIDELINES

MANAGEMENT OF LIPID DISORDERS: IMPLICATIONS OF THE NEW GUIDELINES MANAGEMENT OF LIPID DISORDERS: IMPLICATIONS OF THE NEW GUIDELINES Robert B. Baron MD MS Professor and Associate Dean UCSF School of Medicine Declaration of full disclosure: No conflict of interest EXPLAINING

More information

Laboratory and experimental evidence indicate that atherosclerosis,

Laboratory and experimental evidence indicate that atherosclerosis, Current Perspective High-Sensitivity C-Reactive Protein Potential Adjunct for Global Risk Assessment in the Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease Paul M. Ridker, MD, MPH Abstract Inflammation plays

More information

DISCLOSURES RISK ASSESSMENT. Stroke and Heart Disease -Is there a Link Beyond Risk Factors? Daniel Lackland, MD

DISCLOSURES RISK ASSESSMENT. Stroke and Heart Disease -Is there a Link Beyond Risk Factors? Daniel Lackland, MD STROKE AND HEART DISEASE IS THERE A LINK BEYOND RISK FACTORS? D AN IE L T. L AC K L AN D DISCLOSURES Member of NHLBI Risk Assessment Workgroup RISK ASSESSMENT Count major risk factors For patients with

More information

LDL PARTICLE SIZE: DOES IT MATTER? Samia Mora, M.D., M.H.S., Brigham and Women s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.

LDL PARTICLE SIZE: DOES IT MATTER? Samia Mora, M.D., M.H.S., Brigham and Women s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts. LDL PARTICLE SIZE: DOES IT MATTER? Samia Mora, M.D., M.H.S., Brigham and Women s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts Introduction While both small and large LDL particles may be atherogenic,

More information

HYPERCHOLESTEROLAEMIA STATIN AND BEYOND

HYPERCHOLESTEROLAEMIA STATIN AND BEYOND HYPERCHOLESTEROLAEMIA STATIN AND BEYOND Andrea Luk Division of Endocrinology Department of Medicine & Therapeutics The Chinese University of Hong Kong HA Convention 4 May 2016 Statins reduce CVD and all-cause

More information

Primary Care Management of Women with Hyperlipidemia. Julie Marfell, DNP, BC, FNP, Chairperson, Department of Family Nursing

Primary Care Management of Women with Hyperlipidemia. Julie Marfell, DNP, BC, FNP, Chairperson, Department of Family Nursing Primary Care Management of Women with Hyperlipidemia Julie Marfell, DNP, BC, FNP, Chairperson, Department of Family Nursing Objectives: Define dyslipidemia in women Discuss the investigation process leading

More information

The WHI 12 Years Later: What Have We Learned about Postmenopausal HRT?

The WHI 12 Years Later: What Have We Learned about Postmenopausal HRT? AACE 23 rd Annual Scientific and Clinical Congress (2014) Syllabus Materials: The WHI 12 Years Later: What Have We Learned about Postmenopausal HRT? JoAnn E. Manson, MD, DrPH, FACP, FACE Chief, Division

More information

BMC Med 7/19/2007; Simvastatin linked to reduced incidence of dementia, Parkinson s disease.

BMC Med 7/19/2007; Simvastatin linked to reduced incidence of dementia, Parkinson s disease. March 3, 2012 BD Response to FDA statement regarding Statins The Food and Drug Administration announced on Tuesday (February 28, 2012) the changes to the safety information on the labels of statins regarding

More information

Coronary heart disease (CHD) has an enormous

Coronary heart disease (CHD) has an enormous GLOBAL RISK ASSESSMENT IN CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE * Steven P. Schulman, MD ABSTRACT Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of mortality in the United States. Importantly, atherosclerosis begins at

More information

High Blood Cholesterol

High Blood Cholesterol National Cholesterol Education Program ATP III Guidelines At-A-Glance Quick Desk Reference 1 Step 1 2 Step 2 3 Step 3 Determine lipoprotein levels obtain complete lipoprotein profile after 9- to 12-hour

More information

Main Effect of Screening for Coronary Artery Disease Using CT

Main Effect of Screening for Coronary Artery Disease Using CT Main Effect of Screening for Coronary Artery Disease Using CT Angiography on Mortality and Cardiac Events in High risk Patients with Diabetes: The FACTOR-64 Randomized Clinical Trial Joseph B. Muhlestein,

More information

AHA/CDC Scientific Statement

AHA/CDC Scientific Statement AHA/CDC Scientific Statement Markers of Inflammation and Cardiovascular Disease Application to Clinical and Public Health Practice A Statement for Healthcare Professionals From the Centers for Disease

More information

Multiple comorbidities: additive and predictive of cardiovascular risk. Peter M. Nilsson Lund University University Hospital Malmö, Sweden

Multiple comorbidities: additive and predictive of cardiovascular risk. Peter M. Nilsson Lund University University Hospital Malmö, Sweden Multiple comorbidities: additive and predictive of cardiovascular risk Peter M. Nilsson Lund University University Hospital Malmö, Sweden Clinical outcomes: major complications of CVD Heart Attack/ACS

More information

Journal Club: Niacin in Patients with Low HDL Cholesterol Levels Receiving Intensive Statin Therapy by the AIM-HIGH Investigators

Journal Club: Niacin in Patients with Low HDL Cholesterol Levels Receiving Intensive Statin Therapy by the AIM-HIGH Investigators Journal Club: Niacin in Patients with Low HDL Cholesterol Levels Receiving Intensive Statin Therapy by the AIM-HIGH Investigators Shaikha Al Naimi Doctor of Pharmacy Student College of Pharmacy Qatar University

More information

Effects of Cholesterol and Inflammation-Sensitive Plasma Proteins on Incidence of Myocardial Infarction and Stroke in Men

Effects of Cholesterol and Inflammation-Sensitive Plasma Proteins on Incidence of Myocardial Infarction and Stroke in Men Effects of Cholesterol and Inflammation-Sensitive Plasma Proteins on Incidence of Myocardial Infarction and Stroke in Men G. Engström, MD, PhD; P. Lind, MD; B. Hedblad, MD, PhD; L. Stavenow, MD, PhD; L.

More information

Your healthcare provider has ordered a Boston Heart Cardiac Risk Assessment

Your healthcare provider has ordered a Boston Heart Cardiac Risk Assessment Your healthcare provider has ordered a Boston Heart Cardiac Risk Assessment What does that mean for you? Your healthcare provider has determined that you may be at risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD).

More information

Education. Panel. Triglycerides & HDL-C

Education. Panel. Triglycerides & HDL-C Triglycerides & HDL-C Thomas Dayspring, MD, ACP Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey Attending in Medicine: St Joseph s s Hospital, Paterson, NJ Certified

More information

Management of Lipids in 2015: Just Give them a Statin?

Management of Lipids in 2015: Just Give them a Statin? Management of Lipids in 2015: Just Give them a Statin? James H. Stein, M.D. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health Stone NJ, et al. Circulation

More information

At what coronary risk level is it cost-effective to initiate cholesterol lowering drug treatment in primary prevention?

At what coronary risk level is it cost-effective to initiate cholesterol lowering drug treatment in primary prevention? European Heart Journal (2001) 22, 919 925 doi:10.1053/euhj.2000.2484, available online at http://www.idealibrary.com on At what coronary risk level is it cost-effective to initiate cholesterol lowering

More information

Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults (Adult Treatment Panel II).

Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults (Adult Treatment Panel II). Complete Summary GUIDELINE TITLE (1)Third report of the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults (Adult Treatment

More information

How To Treat Dyslipidemia

How To Treat Dyslipidemia An International Atherosclerosis Society Position Paper: Global Recommendations for the Management of Dyslipidemia Introduction Executive Summary The International Atherosclerosis Society (IAS) here updates

More information

COMMITTEE FOR MEDICINAL PRODUCTS FOR HUMAN USE (CHMP) GUIDELINE ON THE EVALUATION OF MEDICINAL PRODUCTS FOR CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE PREVENTION

COMMITTEE FOR MEDICINAL PRODUCTS FOR HUMAN USE (CHMP) GUIDELINE ON THE EVALUATION OF MEDICINAL PRODUCTS FOR CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE PREVENTION European Medicines Agency Pre-Authorisation Evaluation of Medicines for Human Use London, 25 September 2008 Doc. Ref. EMEA/CHMP/EWP/311890/2007 COMMITTEE FOR MEDICINAL PRODUCTS FOR HUMAN USE (CHMP) GUIDELINE

More information

Journal of the American College of Cardiology Vol. 59, No. 17, 2012 2012 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation ISSN 0735-1097/$36.

Journal of the American College of Cardiology Vol. 59, No. 17, 2012 2012 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation ISSN 0735-1097/$36. Journal of the American College of Cardiology Vol. 59, No. 17, 2012 2012 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation ISSN 0735-1097/$36.00 Published by Elsevier Inc. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2011.12.035

More information

Assessing risk of myocardial infarction and stroke: new data from the Prospective Cardiovascular Münster (PROCAM) study

Assessing risk of myocardial infarction and stroke: new data from the Prospective Cardiovascular Münster (PROCAM) study European Journal of Clinical Investigation (2007) 37, 925 932 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2362.2007.01888.x Blackwell Publishing Ltd Review Assessing risk of myocardial infarction and stroke: new data from the

More information

Will The Coronary Calcium Score Affect the Decision To Treat With Statins?

Will The Coronary Calcium Score Affect the Decision To Treat With Statins? Will The Coronary Calcium Score Affect the Decision To Treat With Statins? Amresh Raina M.D. Division of Cardiology University of Pennsylvania Disclosures No financial relationships relevant to this presentation

More information

COMMITTEE FOR HUMAN MEDICINAL PRODUCTS (CHMP) DRAFT GUIDELINE ON THE EVALUATION OF MEDICINAL PRODUCTS FOR CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE PREVENTION

COMMITTEE FOR HUMAN MEDICINAL PRODUCTS (CHMP) DRAFT GUIDELINE ON THE EVALUATION OF MEDICINAL PRODUCTS FOR CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE PREVENTION European Medicines Agency London, 19 July 2007 Doc. Ref. EMEA/CHMP/EWP/311890/2007 COMMITTEE FOR HUMAN MEDICINAL PRODUCTS (CHMP) DRAFT GUIDELINE ON THE EVALUATION OF MEDICINAL PRODUCTS FOR CARDIOVASCULAR

More information

Low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) is the traditional

Low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) is the traditional Prognostic Utility of ApoB/AI, Total Cholesterol/HDL, Non-HDL Cholesterol, or hs-crp as Predictors of Clinical Risk in Patients Receiving Statin Therapy After Acute Coronary Syndromes Results From PROVE

More information

MEDICAL POLICY SUBJECT: INFLAMMATORY MARKERS OF CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE RISK. POLICY NUMBER: 2.02.15 CATEGORY: Laboratory Tests

MEDICAL POLICY SUBJECT: INFLAMMATORY MARKERS OF CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE RISK. POLICY NUMBER: 2.02.15 CATEGORY: Laboratory Tests MEDICAL POLICY SUBJECT: INFLAMMATORY MARKERS OF PAGE: 1 OF: 7 If a product excludes coverage for a service, it is not covered, and medical policy criteria do not apply. If a commercial product, including

More information

Metabolic Syndrome Overview: Easy Living, Bitter Harvest. Sabrina Gill MD MPH FRCPC Caroline Stigant MD FRCPC BC Nephrology Days, October 2007

Metabolic Syndrome Overview: Easy Living, Bitter Harvest. Sabrina Gill MD MPH FRCPC Caroline Stigant MD FRCPC BC Nephrology Days, October 2007 Metabolic Syndrome Overview: Easy Living, Bitter Harvest Sabrina Gill MD MPH FRCPC Caroline Stigant MD FRCPC BC Nephrology Days, October 2007 Evolution of Metabolic Syndrome 1923: Kylin describes clustering

More information

Associate Professor Patrick Kay Interventional cardiologist Middlemore, Auckland and Mercy Hospitals Auckland

Associate Professor Patrick Kay Interventional cardiologist Middlemore, Auckland and Mercy Hospitals Auckland Associate Professor Patrick Kay Interventional cardiologist Middlemore, Auckland and Mercy Hospitals Auckland 14:00-14:55 WS #45: New Therapies for Lipid Management 15:05-16:00 WS #57: New Therapies for

More information

Therapeutic Approach in Patients with Diabetes and Coronary Artery Disease

Therapeutic Approach in Patients with Diabetes and Coronary Artery Disease Home SVCC Area: English - Español - Português Therapeutic Approach in Patients with Diabetes and Coronary Artery Disease Martial G. Bourassa, MD Research Center, Montreal Heart Institute, Montreal, Quebec,

More information

IR Conference Call on PCSK9

IR Conference Call on PCSK9 IR Conference Call on PCSK9 SAR236553/REGN727 PCSK9 Antibody for Hypercholesterolemia Phase 3 ODYSSEY Program Underway November 5, 2012 1 Safe Harbor Statement This presentation contains forward-looking

More information

Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) Brief

Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) Brief Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) Brief What is Coronary Heart Disease? Coronary Heart Disease (CHD), also called coronary artery disease 1, is the most common heart condition in the United States. It occurs

More information

Lipid levels in patients hospitalized with coronary artery disease: An analysis of 136,905 hospitalizations in Get With The Guidelines

Lipid levels in patients hospitalized with coronary artery disease: An analysis of 136,905 hospitalizations in Get With The Guidelines Lipid levels in patients hospitalized with coronary artery disease: An analysis of 136,905 hospitalizations in Get With The Guidelines Amit Sachdeva, MD, a Christopher P. Cannon, MD, b Prakash C. Deedwania,

More information

OVERVIEW OF THE ADULT TREATMENT PANEL (ATP) III GUIDELINES *

OVERVIEW OF THE ADULT TREATMENT PANEL (ATP) III GUIDELINES * OVERVIEW OF THE ADULT TREATMENT PANEL (ATP) III GUIDELINES * Roger S. Blumenthal, MD INTRODUCTION Although medical evidence suggests that the mortality rates for cardiovascular disease can be significantly

More information

2013 ACC/AHA Guideline on the Treatment of Blood Cholesterol to Reduce Athersclerotic Risk

2013 ACC/AHA Guideline on the Treatment of Blood Cholesterol to Reduce Athersclerotic Risk 2013 ACC/AHA Guideline on the Treatment of Blood Cholesterol to Reduce Athersclerotic Risk Lynne T Braun, PhD, CNP, FAHA, FAAN Professor of Nursing, Nurse Practitioner Rush University Medical Center 2

More information

Role of Body Weight Reduction in Obesity-Associated Co-Morbidities

Role of Body Weight Reduction in Obesity-Associated Co-Morbidities Obesity Role of Body Weight Reduction in JMAJ 48(1): 47 1, 2 Hideaki BUJO Professor, Department of Genome Research and Clinical Application (M6) Graduate School of Medicine, Chiba University Abstract:

More information

THE THIRD REPORT OF THE EXpert

THE THIRD REPORT OF THE EXpert SPECIAL COMMUNICATION Executive Summary of the Third Report of the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults

More information

New Cholesterol Guidelines: Carte Blanche for Statin Overuse Rita F. Redberg, MD, MSc Professor of Medicine

New Cholesterol Guidelines: Carte Blanche for Statin Overuse Rita F. Redberg, MD, MSc Professor of Medicine New Cholesterol Guidelines: Carte Blanche for Statin Overuse Rita F. Redberg, MD, MSc Professor of Medicine Disclosures & Relevant Relationships I have nothing to disclose No financial conflicts Editor,

More information

Cardiac Rehabilitation An Underutilized Class I Treatment for Cardiovascular Disease

Cardiac Rehabilitation An Underutilized Class I Treatment for Cardiovascular Disease Cardiac Rehabilitation An Underutilized Class I Treatment for Cardiovascular Disease What is Cardiac Rehabilitation? Cardiac rehabilitation is a comprehensive exercise, education, and behavior modification

More information

Evidence-Based Secondary Stroke Prevention and Adherence to Guidelines

Evidence-Based Secondary Stroke Prevention and Adherence to Guidelines Evidence-Based Secondary Stroke Prevention and Adherence to Guidelines Mitchell S.V. Elkind, MD, MS Associate Professor of Neurology Columbia University New York, NY Presenter Disclosure Information Mitchell

More information

The Canadian Association of Cardiac

The Canadian Association of Cardiac Reinventing Cardiac Rehabilitation Outside of acute care institutions, cardiovascular disease is a chronic, inflammatory process; the reduction or elimination of recurrent acute coronary syndromes is a

More information

Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of morbidity

Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of morbidity electronic health records Implementation of an Electronic Health Record with an Embedded Quality Improvement Program to Improve the Longitudinal Care of Outpatients with Coronary Artery Disease Allan G.

More information

ESCMID Online Lecture Library. by author

ESCMID Online Lecture Library. by author Do statins improve outcomes of patients with sepsis and pneumonia? Jordi Carratalà Department of Infectious Diseases Statins for sepsis & community-acquired pneumonia Sepsis and CAP are major healthcare

More information

Cardiovascular Effects of Drugs to Treat Diabetes

Cardiovascular Effects of Drugs to Treat Diabetes Cardiovascular Effects of Drugs to Treat Diabetes Steven E. Nissen MD Chairman, Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Cleveland Clinic Disclosure Consulting: Many pharmaceutical companies Clinical Trials:

More information

Prognostic impact of uric acid in patients with stable coronary artery disease

Prognostic impact of uric acid in patients with stable coronary artery disease Prognostic impact of uric acid in patients with stable coronary artery disease Gjin Ndrepepa, Siegmund Braun, Martin Hadamitzky, Massimiliano Fusaro, Hans-Ullrich Haase, Kathrin A. Birkmeier, Albert Schomig,

More information

Coronary Artery Disease leading cause of morbidity & mortality in industrialised nations.

Coronary Artery Disease leading cause of morbidity & mortality in industrialised nations. INTRODUCTION Coronary Artery Disease leading cause of morbidity & mortality in industrialised nations. Although decrease in cardiovascular mortality still major cause of morbidity & burden of disease.

More information

Cardiovascular disease physiology. Linda Lowe-Krentz Bioscience in the 21 st Century October 14, 2011

Cardiovascular disease physiology. Linda Lowe-Krentz Bioscience in the 21 st Century October 14, 2011 Cardiovascular disease physiology Linda Lowe-Krentz Bioscience in the 21 st Century October 14, 2011 Content Introduction The number 1 killer in America Some statistics Recommendations The disease process

More information

Neal Rouzier responds to the JAMA article on Men and Testosterone

Neal Rouzier responds to the JAMA article on Men and Testosterone Neal Rouzier responds to the JAMA article on Men and Testosterone On the first day the JAMA article was released I received 500 emails from physicians and patients requesting my opinion of the article

More information

Secondary Prevention and Rehabilitation

Secondary Prevention and Rehabilitation Secondary Prevention and Rehabilitation Effectiveness of a planned strategy using cardiac rehabilitation nurses for the management of dyslipidemia in patients with coronary artery disease Manohara P. J.

More information

Making Sense of the New Statin guidelines. They are more than just lowering your cholesterol!

Making Sense of the New Statin guidelines. They are more than just lowering your cholesterol! Making Sense of the New Statin guidelines They are more than just lowering your cholesterol! No Disclosures Margaret (Peg) O Donnell DNPs, FNP, ANP B-C, FAANP Senior Nurse Practitioner South Nassau Communities

More information

Listen to your heart: Good Cardiovascular Health for Life

Listen to your heart: Good Cardiovascular Health for Life Listen to your heart: Good Cardiovascular Health for Life Luis R. Castellanos MD, MPH Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine University of California San Diego School of Medicine Sulpizio Family Cardiovascular

More information

HDL cholesterol and residual risk of first cardiovascular events after treatment with potent statin therapy: an analysis from the JUPITER trial

HDL cholesterol and residual risk of first cardiovascular events after treatment with potent statin therapy: an analysis from the JUPITER trial D-10-02654 S0140-6736(10)60713-1 10TL2654 Articles TD HDL cholesterol and residual risk of first cardiovascular events after treatment with potent statin therapy: an analysis from the JUPITER trial Paul

More information

4/4/2013. Mike Rizo, Pharm D, MBA, ABAAHP THE PHARMACIST OF THE FUTURE? METABOLIC SYNDROME AN INTEGRATIVE APPROACH

4/4/2013. Mike Rizo, Pharm D, MBA, ABAAHP THE PHARMACIST OF THE FUTURE? METABOLIC SYNDROME AN INTEGRATIVE APPROACH METABOLIC SYNDROME AN INTEGRATIVE APPROACH AN OPPORTUNITY FOR PHARMACISTS TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE Mike Rizo, Pharm D, MBA, ABAAHP THE EVOLUTION OF THE PHARMACIST 1920s 1960s 2000s THE PHARMACIST OF THE FUTURE?

More information

Statin Template Guidance Use of statins in primary and secondary prevention of vascular disease Endorsed by ABHB MTC for use in Gwent (October 2012)

Statin Template Guidance Use of statins in primary and secondary prevention of vascular disease Endorsed by ABHB MTC for use in Gwent (October 2012) Statin Template Guidance Use of statins in primary and secondary prevention of vascular disease Endorsed by ABHB MTC for use in Gwent (October 2012) Notes relating to this guidance This guidance serves

More information

Measure #257 (NQF 1519): Statin Therapy at Discharge after Lower Extremity Bypass (LEB) National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care

Measure #257 (NQF 1519): Statin Therapy at Discharge after Lower Extremity Bypass (LEB) National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care Measure #257 (NQF 1519): Statin Therapy at Discharge after Lower Extremity Bypass (LEB) National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care 2016 PQRS OPTIONS FOR INDIVIDUAL MEASURES: REGISTRY ONLY

More information

Guideline for Assessment of Cardiovascular Risk in Asymptomatic Adults. Learn and Live SM. ACCF/AHA Pocket Guideline

Guideline for Assessment of Cardiovascular Risk in Asymptomatic Adults. Learn and Live SM. ACCF/AHA Pocket Guideline Learn and Live SM ACCF/AHA Pocket Guideline Based on the 2010 ACCF/AHA Guideline Guideline for Assessment of Cardiovascular Risk in Asymptomatic Adults November 2010 Guideline for Assessment of Cardiovascular

More information

Atherosclerosis of the aorta. Artur Evangelista

Atherosclerosis of the aorta. Artur Evangelista Atherosclerosis of the aorta Artur Evangelista Atherosclerosis of the aorta Diagnosis Classification Prevalence Risk factors Marker of generalized atherosclerosis Risk of embolism Therapy Diagnosis Atherosclerosis

More information

ADVANCE: a factorial randomised trial of blood pressure lowering and intensive glucose control in 11,140 patients with type 2 diabetes

ADVANCE: a factorial randomised trial of blood pressure lowering and intensive glucose control in 11,140 patients with type 2 diabetes ADVANCE: a factorial randomised trial of blood pressure lowering and intensive glucose control in 11,140 patients with type 2 diabetes Effects of a fixed combination of the ACE inhibitor, perindopril,

More information

International Task Force for Prevention Of Coronary Heart Disease. Clinical management of risk factors. coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke

International Task Force for Prevention Of Coronary Heart Disease. Clinical management of risk factors. coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke International Task Force for Prevention Of Coronary Heart Disease Clinical management of risk factors of coronary heart disease and stroke Economic analyses of primary prevention of coronary heart disease

More information

Robert Krysiak, Anna Gdula-Dymek, Bogus³aw Okopieñ

Robert Krysiak, Anna Gdula-Dymek, Bogus³aw Okopieñ Pharmacological Reports 2013, 65, 429 434 ISSN 1734-1140 Copyright 2013 by Institute of Pharmacology Polish Academy of Sciences Lymphocyte-suppressing, endothelial-protective and systemic anti-inflammatory

More information

PRESCRIBING GUIDELINES FOR LIPID LOWERING TREATMENTS for SECONDARY PREVENTION

PRESCRIBING GUIDELINES FOR LIPID LOWERING TREATMENTS for SECONDARY PREVENTION Hull & East Riding Prescribing Committee PRESCRIBING GUIDELINES FOR LIPID LOWERING TREATMENTS for SECONDARY PREVENTION For guidance on Primary Prevention please see NICE guidance http://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg181

More information

RISK STRATIFICATION for Acute Coronary Syndrome in the Emergency Department

RISK STRATIFICATION for Acute Coronary Syndrome in the Emergency Department RISK STRATIFICATION for Acute Coronary Syndrome in the Emergency Department Sohil Pothiawala FAMS (EM), MRCSEd (A&E), M.Med (EM), MBBS Consultant Dept. of Emergency Medicine Singapore General Hospital

More information

Psoriasis Co-morbidities: Changing Clinical Practice. Theresa Schroeder Devere, MD Assistant Professor, OHSU Dermatology. Psoriatic Arthritis

Psoriasis Co-morbidities: Changing Clinical Practice. Theresa Schroeder Devere, MD Assistant Professor, OHSU Dermatology. Psoriatic Arthritis Psoriasis Co-morbidities: Changing Clinical Practice Theresa Schroeder Devere, MD Assistant Professor, OHSU Dermatology Psoriatic Arthritis Psoriatic Arthritis! 11-31% of patients with psoriasis have psoriatic

More information

Can Common Blood Pressure Medications Cause Diabetes?

Can Common Blood Pressure Medications Cause Diabetes? Can Common Blood Pressure Medications Cause Diabetes? By Nieske Zabriskie, ND High blood pressure, or hypertension, is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. In the United States, approximately

More information

Individual Study Table Referring to Part of Dossier: Volume: Page:

Individual Study Table Referring to Part of Dossier: Volume: Page: 2.0 Synopsis AbbVie Inc. Name of Study Drug: Trilipix (ABT-335) Name of Active Ingredient: choline salt of fenofibric acid Individual Study Table Referring to Part of Dossier: Volume: Page: (For National

More information

6/5/2014. Objectives. Acute Coronary Syndromes. Epidemiology. Epidemiology. Epidemiology and Health Care Impact Pathophysiology

6/5/2014. Objectives. Acute Coronary Syndromes. Epidemiology. Epidemiology. Epidemiology and Health Care Impact Pathophysiology Objectives Acute Coronary Syndromes Epidemiology and Health Care Impact Pathophysiology Unstable Angina NSTEMI STEMI Clinical Clues Pre-hospital Spokane County EMS Epidemiology About 600,000 people die

More information

Cardiac Assessment for Renal Transplantation: Pre-Operative Clearance is Only the Tip of the Iceberg

Cardiac Assessment for Renal Transplantation: Pre-Operative Clearance is Only the Tip of the Iceberg Cardiac Assessment for Renal Transplantation: Pre-Operative Clearance is Only the Tip of the Iceberg 2 nd Annual Duke Renal Transplant Symposium March 1, 2014 Durham, NC Joseph G. Rogers, M.D. Associate

More information

Getting Off the Chronic Disease Merry-Go-Round: What s the Weight of the Research?

Getting Off the Chronic Disease Merry-Go-Round: What s the Weight of the Research? Getting Off the Chronic Disease Merry-Go-Round: What s the Weight of the Research? Jody Dushay, MD MMSc Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Boston, MA Session 445 No disclosures Disclosure Jody Dushay,

More information

Effect of Insulin Resistance, Dyslipidemia, and Intra-abdominal Adiposity on the Development of Cardiovascular Disease and Diabetes Mellitus

Effect of Insulin Resistance, Dyslipidemia, and Intra-abdominal Adiposity on the Development of Cardiovascular Disease and Diabetes Mellitus The American Journal of Medicine (2007) Vol 120 (3A), S12 S18 Effect of Insulin Resistance, Dyslipidemia, and Intra-abdominal Adiposity on the Development of Cardiovascular Disease and Diabetes Mellitus

More information

Apixaban Plus Mono vs. Dual Antiplatelet Therapy in Acute Coronary Syndromes: Insights from the APPRAISE-2 Trial

Apixaban Plus Mono vs. Dual Antiplatelet Therapy in Acute Coronary Syndromes: Insights from the APPRAISE-2 Trial Apixaban Plus Mono vs. Dual Antiplatelet Therapy in Acute Coronary Syndromes: Insights from the APPRAISE-2 Trial Connie N. Hess, MD, MHS, Stefan James, MD, PhD, Renato D. Lopes, MD, PhD, Daniel M. Wojdyla,

More information

A Practical Approach to Risk Assessment to Prevent Coronary Artery Disease and Its Complications

A Practical Approach to Risk Assessment to Prevent Coronary Artery Disease and Its Complications A Practical Approach to Risk Assessment to Prevent Coronary Artery Disease and Its Complications MacRae F. Linton, MD, and Sergio Fazio, MD, PhD The recent focus on emerging cardiovascular risk factors,

More information

The Intensive Statin Therapy Myth

The Intensive Statin Therapy Myth F o c u s Michael Shechter MD MA, Roy Beigel MD, Shlomi Matetzky MD, Dov Freimark MD and Pierre Chouraqui MD Heart Institute, Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer, Israel Affiliated to Sackler Faculty of

More information

Effect of an Intervention to Increase Statin Use in Medicare Members Who Qualified for a Medication Therapy Management Program

Effect of an Intervention to Increase Statin Use in Medicare Members Who Qualified for a Medication Therapy Management Program RESEARCH Effect of an Intervention to Increase Statin Use in Medicare Members Karen M. Stockl, PharmD; Daniel Tjioe, PharmD; Sherry Gong, MS; Jenni Stroup, BA; Ann S. M. Harada, PhD, MPH; and Heidi C.

More information

Nieuwe CVD Risicofactoren: Wat kunnen we zien?

Nieuwe CVD Risicofactoren: Wat kunnen we zien? Nieuwe CVD Risicofactoren: Wat kunnen we zien? Michel Langlois, MD, PhD Department of Clinical Chemistry AZ Sint-Jan Brugge & University Hospital Gent Belgium Laboratory parameters for cardiovascular risk

More information

Freiburg Study. The other 24 subjects had healthy markers closer to what would be considered ideal.

Freiburg Study. The other 24 subjects had healthy markers closer to what would be considered ideal. Freiburg Study The Freiburg Study was conducted with 48 healthy human subjects of various ages. None of the test subjects had been diagnosed with any disease prior to the study. None were taking any type

More information

Barriers to Healthcare Services for People with Mental Disorders. Cardiovascular disorders and diabetes in people with severe mental illness

Barriers to Healthcare Services for People with Mental Disorders. Cardiovascular disorders and diabetes in people with severe mental illness Barriers to Healthcare Services for People with Mental Disorders Cardiovascular disorders and diabetes in people with severe mental illness Dr. med. J. Cordes LVR- Klinikum Düsseldorf Kliniken der Heinrich-Heine-Universität

More information

Cohort Studies. Sukon Kanchanaraksa, PhD Johns Hopkins University

Cohort Studies. Sukon Kanchanaraksa, PhD Johns Hopkins University This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License. Your use of this material constitutes acceptance of that license and the conditions of use of materials on this

More information

Risk Factors for Fire Fighter Cardiovascular Disease

Risk Factors for Fire Fighter Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors for Fire Fighter Cardiovascular Disease EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Prepared by: Jefferey L. Burgess, MD, MS, MPH Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health The University of Arizona The Fire Protection

More information

Improving cardiometabolic health in Major Mental Illness

Improving cardiometabolic health in Major Mental Illness Improving cardiometabolic health in Major Mental Illness Dr. Adrian Heald Consultant in Endocrinology and Diabetes Leighton Hospital, Crewe and Macclesfield Research Fellow, Manchester University Metabolic

More information

Secondary Stroke Prevention Luke Bradbury, MD 10/4/14 Fall WAPA Conferfence

Secondary Stroke Prevention Luke Bradbury, MD 10/4/14 Fall WAPA Conferfence Guidelines Secondary Stroke Prevention Luke Bradbury, MD 10/4/14 Fall WAPA Conferfence Stroke/TIA Nearly 700,000 ischemic strokes and 240,000 TIAs every year in the United States Currently, the risk for

More information

Using an EMR to Improve Quality of Care in a National Network

Using an EMR to Improve Quality of Care in a National Network Using an EMR to Improve Quality of Care in a National Network James M. Gill, MD, MPH Associate Professor of Family Medicine Senior Scientist in Health Policy Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, PA

More information

The largest clinical study of Bayer's Xarelto (rivaroxaban) Wednesday, 14 November 2012 07:38

The largest clinical study of Bayer's Xarelto (rivaroxaban) Wednesday, 14 November 2012 07:38 Bayer HealthCare has announced the initiation of the COMPASS study, the largest clinical study of its oral anticoagulant Xarelto (rivaroxaban) to date, investigating the prevention of major adverse cardiac

More information

How To Prevent A Cardiovascular Event

How To Prevent A Cardiovascular Event The Challenges and Benefits of Cardiovascular Risk Assessment in Clinical Practice Steven A Grover MD, MPA From the McGill Cardiovascular Health Improvement Program and the Divisions of General Internal

More information

Osama Jarkas. in Chest Pain Patients. STUDENT NAME: Osama Jarkas DATE: August 10 th, 2015

Osama Jarkas. in Chest Pain Patients. STUDENT NAME: Osama Jarkas DATE: August 10 th, 2015 STUDENT NAME: Osama Jarkas DATE: August 10 th, 2015 PROJECT TITLE: Analysis of ECG Exercise Stress Testing and Framingham Risk Score in Chest Pain Patients PRIMARY SUPERVISOR NAME: Dr. Edward Tan DEPARTMENT:

More information

Implications of Increased C-Reactive Protein for Cardiovascular Risk Stratification in Black and White Men and Women in the US

Implications of Increased C-Reactive Protein for Cardiovascular Risk Stratification in Black and White Men and Women in the US Clinical Chemistry 55:9 1627 1636 (09) Lipids, Lipoproteins, and Cardiovascular Risk Factors Implications of Increased C-Reactive Protein for Cardiovascular Risk Stratification in Black and White Men and

More information

Potential Clinical and Economic Impact of Statin Formulary Management

Potential Clinical and Economic Impact of Statin Formulary Management Potential Clinical and Economic Impact of Statin Formulary Management Karol E. Watson, MD Summary The evidence is clear that aggressive management of cardiac risk factors is beneficial and generally safe

More information

The National Cholesterol Education Program s Adult

The National Cholesterol Education Program s Adult NHLBI/AHA Conference Proceedings Definition of Metabolic Syndrome Report of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute/American Heart Association Conference on Scientific Issues Related to Definition

More information

Albumin and All-Cause Mortality Risk in Insurance Applicants

Albumin and All-Cause Mortality Risk in Insurance Applicants Copyright E 2010 Journal of Insurance Medicine J Insur Med 2010;42:11 17 MORTALITY Albumin and All-Cause Mortality Risk in Insurance Applicants Michael Fulks, MD; Robert L. Stout, PhD; Vera F. Dolan, MSPH

More information

Drug Class Review on HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins)

Drug Class Review on HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins) Drug Class Review on HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitors (Statins) Final Report September 2005 The purpose of this report is to make available information regarding the comparative effectiveness and safety profiles

More information

JNC-8 Blood Pressure and ACC/AHA Cholesterol Guideline Updates. January 30, 2014

JNC-8 Blood Pressure and ACC/AHA Cholesterol Guideline Updates. January 30, 2014 JNC-8 Blood Pressure and ACC/AHA Cholesterol Guideline Updates January 30, 2014 GOALS Review key recommendations from recently published guidelines on blood pressure and cholesterol management Discuss

More information

Hôpitaux Universitaires de Genève Lipides, métabolisme des hydrates de carbonne et maladies cardio-vasculaires

Hôpitaux Universitaires de Genève Lipides, métabolisme des hydrates de carbonne et maladies cardio-vasculaires Hôpitaux Universitaires de Genève Lipides, métabolisme des hydrates de carbonne et maladies cardio-vasculaires Prof. J. Philippe Effect of estrogens on glucose metabolism : Fasting Glucose, HbA1c and C-Peptide

More information

Antioxidants and Heart Disease

Antioxidants and Heart Disease Antioxidants and Heart Disease Antioxidants help protect every cell and membrane in the body against the ravages of everyday living, and thus may help prevent diseases that result from accumulated damage

More information

Cardiovascular Disease and the Endothelium

Cardiovascular Disease and the Endothelium Cardiovascular Disease and the Endothelium by Jeffrey Porro A series of articles for general audiences This series of essays was developed as part of FASEB s efforts to educate the general public, and

More information