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Showing posts with label Jupiter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jupiter. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Should Everyone Be Taking Cholesterol-Lowering Drugs? - Eenfeldt

Should Everyone Be Taking Cholesterol-Lowering Drugs?

Andreas Eenfeldt, MD.
 
A new review of previous research shows that even people with no history of heart disease may slightly lower their risk for heart disease with preventative statin medication*.

Independent.co.uk: ‘Millions’ more to be prescribed statins to beat high cholesterol
There are three reasons to be skeptical of mass medication of the healthy population:

1

All studies included in the review were sponsored by pharmaceutical companies, that sell the drugs involved. It’s not controversial that this leads to positive effects being exaggerated and negative side effects being silenced.

When big money like this is at stake, pharmaceutical companies will use every trick in the book. One of the more obvious examples was when the gigantic JUPITER trial was prematurely terminated by AstraZeneca, just when the figures for their drug happened to look good.

2

These are not harmless vitamin pills we’re talking about. Statins come with relatively frequent side effects, such as muscle pain, muscle weakness, fatigue, a slightly reduced cognitive functioning (on average) and an increased risk of diabetes.

3

The reduction in risk of heart disease in previously heart healthy individuals is hardly great. According to this review the chance of preventing a heart attack, or a similar event, by taking a drug for five years is 1.8 percent! Thus, there is a 98.2 percent likelihood that taking the drug for five years doesn’t protect against such health problems. The risk of troublesome side effects? Significantly greater than the chance of any benefit.

Note that a 1.8 precent chance of benefitting from five years of medication only applies if we blindly trust the pharmaceutical companies’ own studies. Most likely the results are exaggerated, so the chance of a benefit would likely be significantly less than 1.8 percent.

1+2+3+=

Most people probably wouldn’t accept the risk of side effects and long-term medication if told about the 98 percent (at least) risk of having done so in vain.

Would you?
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Read the complete article here.

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Do statins have a role in primary prevention? An update.

Do statins have a role in primary prevention? An update.
Therapeutics Letter Issue 77 / Mar - Apr 2010
Therapeutics Letter #48 (April-June 2003)1 concluded that “statins have not been shown to provide an overall health benefit in primary prevention trials” based on the 5 RCTs8-12 available at that time. More RCTs are now available and 5 systematic reviews2-6 designed to answer this question have been published since 2003. Unfortunately, these reviews do not answer the question “Do the benefits of statins outweigh the harms in people without proven occlusive vascular disease?” This question is critically important to patients, physicians and health care resource utilization.
The Cochrane Collaboration is regarded as the gold standard of systematic reviews. One of its guiding principles is avoiding unnecessary duplication: any independent reviewer following the proper methodology would include the same trials, extract the same data and come to the same interpretation and conclusions. The review is then updated as new trials are published.
 
The 5 published systematic reviews2-6 (none of which are Cochrane reviews) vary in the RCTs included, summary effect estimates, conclusions and declared conflicts of interest of the authors (Table 1).
Table 1. Published systematic reviews
Table1
Two of these reviews report a decrease in total mortality while 3, including the latest, conclude that mortality is not decreased by statins in this setting.
 
What is the explanation for the different relative risk estimates? In part, it is due to the timing of the review and the trials that were available for inclusion. The 2006 review2 did not have access to 3 RCTs17-19.  The 2007 review3 did not have access to 2 RCTs18,19.  The 2008 review4 did not include 2 RCTs13,19 and included 10 RCTs20-29 not included in any of the other reviews. The 2009 and 2010 reviews5,6 had access to the same RCTs and had very small differences in the RCTs included (Table 1). The reason for the variation in the overall mortality estimate between the 2009 and 2010 reviews is that the 2010 review requested and obtained additional details from authors, allowing exclusion of 3659 secondary prevention patients from 4 large RCTs8,10,11,12.

Why is a new systematic review necessary?

The differences in the interpretation and conclusions of these non-Cochrane reviews are confusing for clinicians. They can be resolved by using Cochrane methodology, including the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool. Therefore we performed a new systematic review starting with the 22 RCTs included in at least one of these 5 systematic reviews. We excluded 10 of the RCTs20-29 included in the 2008 review because the population studied was largely or entirely people with occlusive vascular disease at baseline. We included the remaining 12 RCTs8-19, which provided data for at least one of 3 outcomes that we judged least subject to bias and most meaningful to patients: total all-cause mortality, total people with at least one serious adverse event (SAE) and total people with at least one major coronary heart disease (CHD) serious adverse event. All-cause mortality is an important outcome, for which we used the more accurate data from the 2010 review. Total SAEs capture overall mortality and all serious morbidity. Major CHD (non-fatal MI and death from coronary heart disease) is the outcome specifically reduced by statins, and less subject to bias than other cardiovascular outcomes such as revascularizations and strokes.
 
Results. All 12 RCTs report major CHD data, 11 report mortality data and 6 report SAE data. Our meta-analysis demonstrates that the reduction in mortality and major CHD, both SAE outcomes, is not reflected in a reduction in total SAEs (Table 2). The results are similar if they are limited to the 6 RCTs8,9,11,14,16,19 that reported SAEs:  mortality RR 0.90 [0.79-0.98], ARR 0.4%; Major CHD RR 0.70 [0.62-0.79], ARR 1.0%.

 However, getting accurate data entered and analysed is insufficient on its own. Cochrane reviews require assessing the risk of bias for each included RCT using the Risk of Bias Tool. Using this tool we found some risk of bias for each of the 12 included RCTs. Table 2.
 
Table 2. Statins for primary prevention meta-analysis
Table2
 
Loss of blinding to treatment allocation probably occurred in all 12 RCTs, because statins predictably lower LDL cholesterol and the physicians managing the patients knew the lipid parameters. This loss of blinding likely biased clinical decisions regarding revascularization procedures and how outcomes were categorized (e.g. transient ischemic attack or reversible ischemic neurological deficit). Fewer revascularization procedures in the statin group as a result of loss of blinding would result in fewer complications secondary to the procedures, e.g. myocardial infarctions.
 
Other risks of bias affected only some RCTs. Of highest risk are the biases due to stopping RCTs early for benefit, affecting 3 RCTs12,14,19, and incomplete outcome reporting bias (not an intention to treat analysis), affecting 1 RCT18. A recent research study demonstrated that the magnitude of the bias effect from stopping RCTs early for benefit is surprisingly large and robust, RR 0.71 [0.66-0.77].7 Testing the effect of this bias estimate on the early terminated JUPITER trial changes the RR for major CHD from 0.54 to 0.76 and completely negates the mortality benefit.
 
In order to test the effect of the bias from these 4 RCTs we removed them; analysis of the remaining 7 RCTs (Table 2, second row) shows no reduction in mortality. This suggests that the claimed mortality benefit with statins for primary prevention is more likely due to bias than being a true effect. Removing the 4 potentially biased trials also diminished the magnitude of the major CHD relative risk reduction from 26% to 21%.

How can CHD SAEs decrease, but not total SAEs?

All CHD events are SAEs and are counted in both categories. Therefore a reduction in major CHD SAEs should be reflected in a reduction in total SAEs. The fact that it is not suggests that other SAEs are increased by statins negating the reduction in CHD SAEs in this population. A limitation of our analysis is that we could not get total SAE data from all the included RCTs. However, we are confident that the data from the 6 missing RCTs would not change the results, because they represent only 41.2% of the total population and include ALLHAT-LLT10, where one would not expect a reduction in total SAEs; in that trial there was no effect on mortality or cardiovascular SAEs. 

Conclusions

  • Systematic reviews and meta-analyses are challenging and require much more than locating RCTs and plugging in the numbers.
  • The claimed mortality benefit of statins for primary prevention is more likely a measure of bias than a real effect.
  • The reduction in major CHD serious adverse events with statins as compared to placebo is not reflected in a reduction in total serious adverse events.
  • Statins do not have a proven net health benefit in primary prevention populations and thus when used in that setting do not represent good use of scarce health care resources.


The draft of this Therapeutics Letter was submitted for review to 45 experts and primary care physicians in order to correct any inaccuracies and to ensure that the information is concise and relevant to clinicians.

References
  1. Therapeutics Initiative. Do statins have a role in primary prevention? Therapeutics Letter. Apr-Jun 2003; 48:1-2. http://ti.ubc.ca/letter48
  2. Thavendiranathan P, Bagai A, Brookhart MA, Choudhry NK. Primary prevention of cardiovascular diseases with statin therapy: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Arch Intern Med. 2006;166(21):2307-2313.
  3. Abramson J, Wright JM. Are lipid lowering guidelines evidence-based? Lancet. 2007;369(9557):168-9.
  4. Mills EJ, Rachlis B, Wu P, et al. Primary prevention of cardiovascular mortality and events with statin treatments. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2008;52(22):1769-1781.
  5. Brugts JJ, Yetgin T, Hoeks SE, et al. The benefits of statins in people without established cardio-vascular disease but with cardiovascular risk factors: meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. BMJ. 2009;338:b2376. doi:10.1136/bmj.b2376
  6. Ray KK, Sreenivasha RKS, Sebhat E, et al. Statins and all-cause mortality in high-risk primary prevention. A meta-analysis of 11 randomized controlled trials involving 65,229 participants. Arch Intern Med. 2010;170(12):1024-1031. 
  7. Bassler D, Briel M, Montori VM, et al. Stopping randomized trials early for benefit and estimation of treatment effects: systematic review and meta-regression analysis. JAMA. 2010;303(12):1180-87.
  8. Shepherd J. Cobbe SM. Ford I. Isles CG. Lorimer AR. MacFarlane PW. McKillop JH. Packard CJ. Prevention of coronary heart disease with pravastatin in men with hypercholesterolemia. West of Scotland Coronary Prevention Study Group. New England Journal of Medicine. 333(20):1301-7, 1995 Nov 16.
  9. Downs JR. Clearfield M. Weis S. Whitney E. Shapiro DR. Beere PA. Langendorfer A. Stein EA. Kruyer W. Gotto AM Jr. Primary prevention of acute coronary events with lovastatin in men and women with average cholesterol levels: results of AFCAPS/TexCAPS. Air Force/Texas Coronary Atherosclerosis Prevention Study. JAMA. 279(20):1615-22, 1998 May 27.
  10. ALLHAT Officers and Coordinators for the ALLHAT Collaborative Research Group. The Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack Trial. Major outcomes in moderately hypercholesterolemic, hypertensive patients randomized to pravastatin vs usual care: The Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack Trial (ALLHAT-LLT). JAMA. 288(23):2998-3007, 2002 Dec 18.
  11. Shepherd J. Blauw GJ. Murphy MB. Bollen EL. Buckley BM. Cobbe SM. Ford I. Gaw A. Hyland M. Jukema JW. Kamper AM. Macfarlane PW. Meinders AE. Norrie J. Packard CJ. Perry IJ. Stott DJ. Sweeney BJ. Twomey C. Westendorp RG. PROSPER study group. PROspective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk. Pravastatin in elderly individuals at risk of vascular disease (PROSPER): a randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 360(9346):1623-30, 2002 Nov 23.
  12. Sever PS. Dahlof B. Poulter NR. Wedel H. Beevers G. Caulfield M. Collins R. Kjeldsen SE. Kristinsson A. McInnes GT. Mehlsen J. Nieminen M. O'Brien E. Ostergren J. ASCOT investigators. Prevention of coronary and stroke events with atorvastatin in hypertensive patients who have average or lower-than-average cholesterol concentrations, in the Anglo-Scandinavian Cardiac Outcomes Trial--Lipid Lowering Arm (ASCOT-LLA): a multicentre randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 361(9364):1149-58, 2003 Apr 5.
  13. Collins R. Armitage J. Parish S. Sleigh P. Peto R. Heart Protection Study Collaborative Group. MRC/BHF Heart Protection Study of cholesterol-lowering with simvastatin in 5963 people with diabetes: a randomised placebo-controlled trial. Lancet. 361(9374):2005-16, 2003 Jun 14.
  14. 14. Colhoun HM. Betteridge DJ. Durrington PN. Hitman GA. Neil HA. Livingstone SJ. Thomason MJ. Mackness MI. Charlton-Menys V. Fuller JH. CARDS investigators. Primary prevention of cardiovascular disease with atorvastatin in type 2 diabetes in the Collaborative Atorvastatin Diabetes Study (CARDS): multicentre randomised placebo-controlled trial. Lancet. 364(9435):685-96, 2004 Aug 21-27.
  15. Asselbergs FW, Diercks GF, Hillege HL, et al; Prevention of Renal and Vascular Endstage Disease Intervention Trial (PREVEND IT) Investigators. Effects of fosinopril and pravastatin on cardiovascular events in subjects with microalbuminuria. Circulation. 2004;110(18):2809-2816.
  16. Anderssen SA, Hjelstuen AK, Hjermann I, Bjerkan K, Holme I. Fluvastatin and lifestyle modification for reduction of carotid intima-media thickness and left ventricular mass progression in drug-treated hypertensives. Atherosclerosis. 2005;178(2):387-397.
  17. Knopp RH, d'Emden M, Smilde JG, Pocock SJ. Efficacy and safety of atorvastatin in the prevention of cardiovascular end points in subjects with type 2 diabetes: the Atorvastatin Study for Prevention of Coronary Heart Disease Endpoints in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (ASPEN). Diabetes Care. 2006;29(7):1478-1485.2007;115(1):114-126.
  18. Nakamura H. Arakawa K. Itakura H. Kitabatake A. Goto Y. Toyota T. Nakaya N. Nishimoto S. Muranaka M. Yamamoto A. Mizuno K. Ohashi Y. MEGA Study Group. Primary prevention of cardiovascular disease with pravastatin in Japan (MEGA Study): a prospective randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 368(9542):1155-63, 2006 Sep 30.
  19. Ridker PM, Danielson E, Fonseca FA, et al; JUPITER Study Group. Rosuvastatin to prevent vascular events in men and women with elevated C-reactive protein. N Engl J Med. 2008;359(21):2195-2207.
  20. Anonymous. Pravastatin use and risk of coronary events and cerebral infarction in japanese men with moderate hypercholesterolemia: the Kyushu Lipid Intervention Study. Journal of Atherosclerosis & Thrombosis. 7(2):110-21, 2000.
  21. Furberg CD. Adams HP Jr. Applegate WB. Byington RP. Espeland MA. Hartwell T. Hunninghake DB. Lefkowitz DS. Probstfield J. Riley WA. et al. Effect of lovastatin on early carotid atherosclerosis and cardiovascular events. Asymptomatic Carotid Artery Progression Study (ACAPS) Research Group. Circulation. 90(4):1679-87, 1994 Oct.
  22. Holdaas H. Fellstrom B. Jardine AG. Holme I. Nyberg G. Fauchald P. Gronhagen-Riska C. Madsen S. Neumayer HH. Cole E. Maes B. Ambuhl P. Olsson AG. Hartmann A. Solbu DO. Pedersen TR. Assessment of LEscol in Renal Transplantation (ALERT) Study Investigators. Effect of fluvastatin on cardiac outcomes in renal transplant recipients: a multicentre, randomised, placebo-controlled trial. Lancet. 361(9374):2024-31, 2003 Jun 14
  23. Hedblad B. Wikstrand J. Janzon L. Wedel H. Berglund G. Low-dose metoprolol CR/XL and fluvastatin slow progression of carotid intima-media thickness: Main results from the Beta-Blocker Cholesterol-Lowering Asymptomatic Plaque Study (BCAPS). Circulation. 103(13):1721-6, 2001 Apr 3.
  24. Sawayama Y. Shimizu C. Maeda N. Tatsukawa M. Kinukawa N. Koyanagi S. Kashiwagi S. Hayashi J. Effects of probucol and pravastatin on common carotid atherosclerosis in patients with asymptomatic hypercholesterolemia. Fukuoka Atherosclerosis Trial (FAST). Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 39(4):610-6, 2002 Feb 20.
  25. Salonen R. Nyyssonen K. Porkkala E. Rummukainen J. Belder R. Park JS. Salonen JT. Kuopio Atherosclerosis Prevention Study (KAPS). A population-based primary preventive trial of the effect of LDL lowering on atherosclerotic progression in carotid and femoral arteries. Circulation. 92(7):1758-64, 1995 Oct 1.
  26. Mercuri M. Bond MG. Sirtori CR. Veglia F. Crepaldi G. Feruglio FS. Descovich G. Ricci G. Rubba P. Mancini M. Gallus G. Bianchi G. D'Alo G. Ventura A. Pravastatin reduces carotid intima-media thickness progression in an asymptomatic hypercholesterolemic mediterranean population: the Carotid Atherosclerosis Italian Ultrasound Study. American Journal of Medicine. 101(6):627-34, 1996 Dec.
  27. Anonymous. Effects of pravastatin in patients with serum total cholesterol levels from 5.2 to 7.8 mmol/liter (200 to 300 mg/dl) plus two additional atherosclerotic risk factors. The Pravastatin Multinational Study Group for Cardiac Risk Patients. American Journal of Cardiology. 72(14):1031-7, 1993 Nov 1.
  28. Zanchetti A. Crepaldi G. Bond MG. Gallus G. Veglia F. Mancia G. Ventura A. Baggio G. Sampieri L. Rubba P. Sperti G. Magni A. PHYLLIS Investigators. Different effects of antihypertensive regimens based on fosinopril or hydrochlorothiazide with or without lipid lowering by pravastatin on progression of asymptomatic carotid atherosclerosis: principal results of PHYLLIS--a randomized double-blind trial. Stroke. 35(12):2807-12, 2004 Dec.
  29. Mohler ER 3rd. Hiatt WR. Creager MA. Cholesterol reduction with atorvastatin improves walking distance in patients with peripheral arterial disease. Circulation. 108(12):1481-6, 2003 Sep 23.
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Read the complete article here.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Why Women Should Stop Their Cholesterol Lowering Medication - Hyman

Why Women Should Stop Their Cholesterol Lowering Medication

by    January 19th, 2012


If you are a post-menopausal women with high cholesterol, your doctor will almost certainly recommend cholesterol lowering medication or statins. And it just might kill you. A new study in the Archives of Internal Medicine found that statins increase the risk of getting diabetes by 71 percent in post-menopausal women.

Since diabetes is a major cause of heart disease, this study calls into question current recommendations and guidelines from most professional medical associations and physicians. The recommendation for women to take statins to prevent heart attacks (called primary prevention) may do more harm than good.
Statins have been proven to prevent second heart attacks, but not first heart attacks.
Take it if you already have had one, but beware if your doctor recommends it for you if have never had a heart attack.

This current study adds to an increasing body of literature questioning the benefits of statins, while highlighting their potential risks.

New Study Shows 48 Percent Risk of Diabetes in Women Who Take Statins

This study examined the data from the large government sponsored study called the Women’s Health Initiative, the same study that disabused us of the idea that Premarin prevented heart attacks in postmenopausal women.

In fact, based on this randomized controlled trial, estrogen replacement therapy, once considered the gold standard of medical care for the prevention of heart disease, was relegated to the trash bin of history joining medicine’s many other fallen heroes including DES, Thalidomide, Vioxx, Avandia, and more.

In this new study researchers reviewed the effect of statin prescriptions in a group of 153,840 women without diabetes and with an average age of 63.2 years. About 7 percent of women reported taking statin medication between 1993 and 1996. Today there are many, many more women taking statin medications, thus many more are at risk from harm from statins.

During the 3-year period of the study, 10,242 new cases were reported – a whopping 71 percent increase in risk from women who didn’t take statins. This association stayed strong at a 48 percent increased risk of getting diabetes, even after taking into account age, race/ethnicity, and weight or body mass index. These increases in disease risk were consistent for all statins on the market.
This effect also occurred in those with and without heart disease. Surprisingly disease risk was worse in thin women. Minority women were also disproportionately affected. The risk of diabetes was 49 percent for white women, 57 percent for Hispanic women, and 78 percent for Asian women.
But in a typical “my mind’s made up, don’t confuse me with the facts” statement by the medical establishment, the researchers said we should not change our guidelines for statin use for the primary prevention of heart disease.

In a large meta-analysis published in the Lancet last year, scientists found that statins increased the risk of diabetes by 9 percent. If current guidelines were followed for those who should take statins, and people actually took them (thank God only 50 percent of prescriptions are ever filled by patients), there would be 3 million more diabetics in America. Oops.

Other studies have recently called into question the belief that high cholesterol levels increase your risk of heart disease as you get older. For those over 85 it turns out having high cholesterol will protect you from dying from a heart attack, and, in fact, from death from any cause.

Low Cholesterol May Kill You

A recent study showed that in healthy older persons, high cholesterol levels were associated with lower non-cardiovascular-related mortality. This is extremely concerning because millions of prescriptions are written every day to lower cholesterol in the older population, yet no association has been found between higher cholesterol and heart disease deaths for those aged 55 to 84; and for those over 85, the association seems to be inverse — higher cholesterol predicts lower risk of death from heart disease.

The pharmaceutical industry, medical associations, and academic researchers whose budgets are provided by grants from the pharmaceutical industry continue to preach the wonders of statins, but studies like these should have us look good and hard at our current practices. Are we doing more harm than good?

Cardiologists recommend putting statins in the water and giving them out at fast food restaurants and having them available over the counter. They believe in driving cholesterol as low as possible. Statin prescriptions are handed out with religious fervor, but do they work to prevent heart attacks and death if you haven’t had a heart attack already?

Bottom line: NO! If you want to learn why this is true, read on.

Statins Don’t Work to Prevent First Heart Attacks

Recently, the Cochrane Group did a review of all the major statin studies by an international group of independent scientists. The review failed to show benefit in using statins to prevent heart attacks and death. In addition, many other studies support this and point out the frequent and significant side effects that come with taking these drugs. (i) If scientists found that drinking two glasses of water in the morning prevented heart attacks, even if the evidence was weak, we would jump on board. Big up side, no down side.

But this is not the case with statins. These drugs frequently cause muscle damage, muscle cramps, muscle weakness, muscle aches, exercise intolerance (ii) (even in the absence of pain and elevated CPK – a muscle enzyme), sexual dysfunction, liver and nerve damage and other problems in 10-15 percent of patients who take them. (iii) They can also cause significant cellular, muscle, and nerve injury as well as cell death in the ABSENCE of symptoms. (iv)

There is no lack of research calling into question the benefits of statins. Unfortunately, that research doesn’t get the benefit of billions of dollars of marketing and advertising that statins do. One big trial was touted as proving statins work to prevent heart attacks, but the devil is in the details.

It was the JUPITER (v) trial that showed that lowering LDL (or bad cholesterol) without a reduction in inflammation (measured by C-reactive protein) didn’t prevent heart attacks or death. (vi) Statins happen to reduce inflammation so the study has been touted as proof of the effectiveness of these medications.

Mind you it wasn’t lowering the cholesterol that helped (which is the intended purpose of statins), but the fact that they lower inflammation. What is ignored by people who use this study to “prove” that statins work is the fact that there are so many better ways to lower inflammation than taking these drugs.

Yet other studies have shown no proven benefit for statins in healthy women (vii) with high cholesterol or in anyone over 69 years old. (viii) Some studies even show that aggressive lowering of cholesterol can cause MORE heart disease. The ENHANCE trial showed that aggressive cholesterol treatment with two medications (Zocor and Zetia) lowered cholesterol much more than one drug alone, but led to more arterial plaque and no fewer heart attacks. (ix)

Other research calls into question our focus on LDL or the bad cholesterol. We focus on it because we have good drugs to lower it, but it may not be the real problem. The real problem is low HDL that is caused by insulin resistance (diabesity).

In fact studies show that if you lower the bad (LDL) cholesterol in people with low HDL (good cholesterol) that is a marker of diabesity – the continuum of obesity, prediabetes and diabetes – there’s no benefit. (x)

Most people simply ignore the fact that 50-75 percent of people who have heart attacks have normal cholesterol. (xi) The Honolulu Heart Study showed older patients with lower cholesterol have higher risks of death than those with higher cholesterol. (xii)

Some patients with multiple risk factors, or who have had previous heart attacks do benefit, but when you look closely the results are underwhelming. It’s all in how you spin the numbers. For high-risk males (those who are overweight and have high blood pressure, diabetes, and/or a family history of heart attacks) and are younger than 69 there is some evidence of benefit, but one hundred men would need to be treated to prevent just one heart attack.

That means that 99/100 men who take the drug receive no benefit. Drug ads say the risk is reduced by 33 percent. Sounds good, but that just means the risk of getting a heart attack goes down from 3 percent to 2 percent.

Despite the extensive data showing that statins are a questionable therapy at best, they are still the number one selling drug in the US. What isn’t so well known is that 75 percent of statin prescriptions are written for people who will receive no proven benefit. The cost of these prescriptions? Over $20 billion a year.

Yet somehow the 2004 National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines expanded the previous guidelines to recommend that even more people without heart disease take statins (from 13 million to 40 million) (xiii) What are we thinking?

Why would respected scientists go against the overwhelming research that statins don’t prevent heart disease in people who haven’t already had a heart attack?

You can find the answer if you follow the money. Eight of the nine experts on the panel who developed these guidelines had financial ties to the drug industry. Thirty-four other non-industry affiliated experts sent a petition to protest the recommendations to the National Institutes of Health saying the evidence was weak.

What Should Women Do?
It is time to push the sacred cow of statins overboard.
But first let me say this. If you have had a heart attack, or have heart disease, the evidence shows they do in fact help protect against a second heart attack, so keep taking them. However, you should be aware that most prescriptions for statins are given to healthy people whose cholesterol is a little high. For these folks the risk clearly outweighs the benefit.

The editorial that accompanies the recent study on women taking cholesterol-lowering medication that I opened this article with was quite clear. Dr. Kirsten Johansen from the University of California, San Francisco said that the increased risk of diabetes in women without heart disease has “important implications for the balance of risk and benefit of statins in the setting of primary prevention in which previous meta-analyses show no benefit on all-cause mortality.”

In plain English, she said that we shouldn’t be using statin drugs for women without heart disease because:
  1. The evidence shows they don’t work to prevent heart attacks if you never had one.
  2. They significantly increase the risk of diabetes.
Treating risk factors like high cholesterol is misguided. We must treat causes – what we eat, how much we exercise, how we handle stress, our social connections and environmental toxins are all more powerfully linked to creating health and preventing disease than any drug on the market.
Remember what you put at the end of your fork is more powerful than anything you will ever find at the bottom of a pill bottle.

My new book The Blood Sugar Solution, which comes out at the end of February, gives exact details on what you should put at the end of your fork to prevent and reverse diabesity. It provides a comprehensive solution to the health problems facing our nation today.

Now I’d like to hear from you …

What do you think of statins?

Have you taken statins? What has your experience been?

Why do you think the medical establishment prescribes drugs that research shows don’t work?
Please leave your thoughts by adding a comment below – but remember, we can’t offer personal medical advice online, so be sure to limit your comments to those about taking back our health!

To your good health,
Mark Hyman, MD

References:

(i) Abramson J, Wright JM. Are lipid-lowering guidelines evidence-based? Lancet. 2007 Jan 20;369(9557):168-9
(ii) Sirvent P, Mercier J, Lacampagne A. New insights into mechanisms of statin-associated myotoxicity. Curr Opin Pharmacol. 2008 Jun;8(3):333-8.
(iii) Kuncl RW. Agents and mechanisms of toxic myopathy. Curr Opin Neurol. 2009 Oct;22(5):506-15. PubMed PMID: 19680127.
(iv) Tsivgoulis G, et. al, Presymptomatic Neuromuscular Disorders Disclosed Following Statin Treatment, Arch Intern Med. 2006;166:1519-1524
(vi) Ridker PM, Danielson E, Fonseca FA, Genest J, Gotto AM Jr, Kastelein JJ, Koenig W, Libby P, Lorenzatti AJ, MacFadyen JG, Nordestgaard BG, Shepherd J, Willerson JT, Glynn RJ; JUPITER Study Group. Rosuvastatin to prevent vascular events in men and women with elevated C-reactive protein. N Engl J Med. 2008 Nov 20;359(21):2195-207.
(vii)Abramson J, Wright JM. Are lipid-lowering guidelines evidence-based? Lancet. 2007 Jan 20;369(9557):168-9
(viii) IBID
(ix) Brown BG, Taylor AJ Does ENHANCE Diminish Confidence in Lowering LDL or in Ezetimibe? Engl J Med 358:1504, April 3, 2008 Editorial
(x) Barter P, Gotto AM, LaRosa JC, Maroni J, Szarek M, Grundy SM, Kastelein JJ, Bittner V, Fruchart JC; Treating to New Targets Investigators. HDL cholesterol, very low levels of LDL cholesterol, and cardiovascular events. N Engl J Med. 2007 Sep 27;357(13):1301-10.
(xi) Hansson GK Inflammation, Atherosclerosis, and Coronary Artery Disease N Engl J Med 352:1685, April 21, 2005
(xii) Schatz IJ, Masaki K, Yano K, Chen R, Rodriguez BL, Curb JD. Cholesterol and all-cause mortality in elderly people from the Honolulu Heart Program: a cohort study. Lancet. 2001 Aug 4;358(9279):351-5.
(xiii) http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/about/ncep/index.htm
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About Dr Mark Hyman

MARK HYMAN, MD is dedicated to identifying and addressing the root causes of chronic illness through a groundbreaking whole-systems medicine approach called Functional Medicine. He is a family physician, a four-time New York Times bestselling author, and an international leader in his field. Through his private practice, education efforts, writing, research, and advocacy, he empowers others to stop managing symptoms and start treating the underlying causes of illness, thereby tackling our chronic-disease epidemic. More about Dr. Hyman or on Functional Medicine. Click here to view all Press and Media Releases
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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

It's the Calcium Score Stupid! - HeartHawk

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Tuesday, November 23, 2010

JUPITER to Earth: It's the Calcium Score Stupid!
Well, well, well! A funny thing happened on the way to the "statin forum." Astra-Zeneca, in a bald-faced attempt to broaden the market for its statin product Crestor, ended up proving beyond a shadow of a doubt that heart scans and calcium scoring is the most powerful predictor of heart attacks in asymptomatic people.

A post hoc analysis of the MESA study population using JUPITER criteria revealed at 25-fold increase in risk for persons having a positive calcium score. These two studies were fairly large so it was adequately powered to deliver results with a high degree of confidence.

For years docs like Bill Davis and Bill Blanchet have been screaming this from the hilltops and it something every Track Your Plaque practitioner knows. If you have a positive calcium score you have coronary artery disease and your risk of a heart attack skyrockets. Fortunately, it also gives you often decades of warning so you can actually DO something about it. Coupled with technologies like advanced lipoprotein you can find the root causes and correct them.

So, "thank you" Atra-Zeneca. I know you did it for the money - but what the heck - you might end up having helped save some lives in spite of it!

Now darn it, go out talk to your doc about getting that heart scan if you have any doubts about having the seeds of heart disease in your arteries.

Looking out for your health,
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Who is HeartHawk?
I am a numbers guy, an engineer, MBA, and for the real numbers geeks, a Six Sigma Black Belt (statistics on steroids). I am also a heart disease sufferer. It took my mother, her brother, and their father. One minute they were alive and symptom free, the next they were dead. No good-byes, just gone. So, I became a heart health activist and resolved that I will die some other way. This blog is about my journey to save myself and others, unearthing advances and atrocities, separating hope from hype, and delivering the unvarnished truth about curing heart disease, both good and bad. So, hold on tight. I promise you a hell of a ride!

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Read HeartHawk's blog here.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

New Documentary Exposes the Over-Prescription of Statins -Smith



New Documentary Exposes the Over-Prescription of Statins
An estimated 40 million people take a statin to lower their cholesterol levels. These are one of the most widely prescribed medications in history and, of course, one of the most profitable.

We are led to believe that the benefits associated with statins far outweigh any risks. However, when it comes to primary prevention (accounting for around 75 percent of all the people who take a statin), no clinical trial has been able to conclusively show any net benefit.

This is one of the issues discussed in the documentary film STATIN NATION: The Great Cholesterol Cover Up.


If we look at the history of primary prevention clinical trials involving statins, we find that none of the major trials were able to demonstrate a significant reduction in the number of deaths from all causes. The AFCAPS, ASCOT, CARDS, PROSPER and WOSCOPS clinical trials all failed to show a statistically significant reduction in all cause mortality.

This data for deaths from all causes is, of course, important because it is the only measure we can use to determine if the statin is going to extend life expectancy or not.

Whilst some statin clinical trials have shown a very slight reduction in cardiac events, this has always been counter-acted by deaths from other causes. The net result being that people did not live any longer after taking the statin.

In fact, a meta-analysis of primary prevention clinical trials published in 2001 suggested that statins increase mortality when taken over a ten year period for both men and women.

More recently, pharmaceutical companies and much of the world's media have been touting the results of the JUPITER trial. However, if we take a closer look at the data for this trial, we can see that the statin and the placebo group had exactly the same number of cardiovascular related deaths - a fact that is highlighted by Dr Malcolm Kendrick in the new documentary.

In addition, an article published in the Archives of Internal Medicine in 2010 questioned the validity of the data from the JUPITER trial and raised concerns about the role of the company sponsoring the trial. Another article published in the journal Cardiology in 2011 raised similar concerns.

In 2010, a meta-analysis of 11 statin trials was published in the Archives of Internal Medicine. Professor Kausik Ray and colleagues concluded that statins provided no benefit in terms of deaths from all causes. It is worth mentioning that this analysis had the 'cleanest' dataset of any analysis completed to date - the researchers were able to exclude patients with existing heart disease (secondary prevention) and only include data associated with primary prevention.

In 2011, the highly respected Cochrane Collaborative conducted a review of statin clinical trials. Based on this review, lead authors Dr Shah Ebrahim and Dr Fiona Taylor said that they could not recommend the use of statins for primary prevention. The absolute benefit was so small that it could have been down to chance, and even if it was a real benefit, 1000 people would have to be treated for one year to prevent one death.

Thus, even before we start to assess the risks associated with statins, we can see that there is no meaningful net benefit where primary prevention is concerned.

Adverse Effects

We are told that the adverse effects of statins are only experienced by a very small number of people. This is said with confidence despite the fact that many of the trials did not report the adverse effects at all. For example, in the Cochrane review, the researchers noted that eight of the 14 randomized controlled primary prevention trials of statins analyzed did not report on adverse events.

It is very difficult to obtain a realistic overall percentage for the rate of adverse effects, however, GreenMedInfo.com has compiled what is probably the most extensive database of published studies documenting statin adverse effects. This body of evidence shows that there are more than 300 documented adverse effects of statins. This document can be accessed here: Statin Toxicity Research.

In summary, it is clear from the clinical evidence that for at least 75 percent of people who are taking a statin, there is no net benefit; only a strong possibility of significant adverse effects.
In my next article, I will focus on the use of statins for people who already have a diagnosed heart problem.

REFERENCES


Hughes, S. Cochrane review stirs controversy over statins in primary prevention. TheHeart.org
JANUARY 20, 2011
http://www.theheart.org/article/1174743.do

Friday, August 17, 2012

Another industry funded statin study that smacks of bad science and bias - Briffa

Another industry funded statin study that smacks of bad science and bias

‘JUPITER’ is the name given to a study which tested the effectiveness of the statin drug rosuvastatin (Crestor). The effects of rosuvastatin were compared with placebo in a large group of individuals free from a history of cardiovascular disease (such as previous heart attack or stroke) [1]. Testing in this setting (what is known as ‘primary prevention’) generally yields less beneficial results than in individuals with known cardiovascular disease (‘secondary prevention’). Despite being deemed at relatively low risk, the individuals treated with rosuvastatin saw significant improvements in some outcomes (more on this later), and the study got a lot of positive media and medical attention as a result.

One slight fly in the ointment that emerged from this study was the fact that those treated with a statin had a significantly increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes. Other studies have also found statins can up the risk of this condition. So, last week a study was published [2] in the Lancet medical journal, in which the original JUPITER authors looked again at their data to, supposedly, assess whether or not the benefits of rosuvastatin outweighed any risk from diabetes.

The authors found that the enhance risk of diabetes was only seen in individuals with at least one major risk factor diabetes. They go on to tell us that in this group, treatment with statins led to 54 new cases of diabetes being diagnosed. However, all is well because the group treated with statins also had 134 fewer ‘vascular events’.

The term ‘vascular’ event, however, covers a multitude of ills, including unstable angina (heart pain that comes on in an unpredictable fashion), non-fatal heart attacks, non-fatal strokes, fatal heart attacks, fatal strokes, and ‘revascularisations’ (e.g. insertion of a stent or bypass surgery). An outcome that is made up of lots of different outcomes is sometimes referred to as a ‘composite endpoint’. There is at least some doubt about the appropriateness of using composite endpoints to judge the effectiveness of medical interventions.

To begin with, the wider the net is cast, the more likely benefit will be seen, and the more likely the benefits will be deemed to be ‘statistically significant’. Also, some of the outcomes that are of limited relevance clinically (e.g. unstable angina) can occur frequently. This can skew the statistics in favour of finding ‘significant’ results, even though the clinical significance is debatable. The risk of the most important outcomes (such as fatal heart attacks and overall risk of death) may be reduced only a small amount or not at all.

Some researchers have raised the idea that drug companies and researchers may ‘game’ (deliberately manipulate) the design of studies by using composite endpoints in a way which inflates the apparent benefits of a drug [3].

In this latest regarding the impact of rosuvastatin on diabetes risk seen in the JUPITER study, the authors seem keen to remind us of the benefits of statins using a composite endpoint. However, analysis of adverse effects are limited to one outcome (diabetes). This basic technique really does much to stack the odds in favour of ending up a favourable end result.

I have seen many, many statin studies which use composite end points for benefits. Never, though, have I seen one which uses composite endpoints for adverse effects. In addition to increasing diabetes risk, statins have the potential to precipitate a range of other adverse effects including muscle pain, muscle damage, liver damage and kidney damage. How about lumping all those and other effects together to see how that ‘benefits’ and ‘risks’ stack up then?

There’s more than a whiff of bias here. Is there any other evidence that the authors of the study were biased and committed, perhaps, to finding positive results for rosuvastatin? I believe so.

In the abstract (summary) of the study, the authors are keen to point out that in individuals statins reduced the risk of venous thromboembolism (e.g. clots in the veins of the legs known as deep vein thrombosis) by about half. They also tell us that in people with or without risk factors for diabetes statins reduced overall risk of death by 17 and 22 per cent respectively. These are impressive statistics perhaps. But what the authors neglect to tell us, though, is that none of these outcomes was ‘statistically significant’, which means the ‘benefits’ the authors laud were much more likely to be due to chance than any genuine effect from taking statins.

It’s unlikely that any of us will be too surprised to learn that the original JUPITER study and this latest poor excuse of a paper were funded by the company that makes rosuvastatin (AstraZeneca).

References:
1. Ridker PM, et al. JUPITER Study Group. Rosuvastatin to prevent vascular events in men and women with elevated C-reactive protein. N Engl J Med 2008;359(21):2195-2207
2. Ridker PM, et al. Cardiovascular benefits and diabetes risks of statin therapy in primary prevention: an analysis from the JUPITER trial. The Lancet 2012;380(9841):565-571
3. Kip KE, et al. The Problem With Composite End Points in Cardiovascular Studies – The Story of Major Adverse Cardiac Events and Percutaneous Coronary Intervention. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2008;51(7):701-707
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Read the full article here.

Thursday, May 31, 2012

More statin shenanigans


mouth full of pills

If you read the papers or watch the news you’ve probably heard about the recently published JUPITER study, advertised with bold headlines such as “Cholesterol drug causes risk of heart attack to plummet” and “Cholesterol-fighting drug shows wider benefit”. If you’ve been following this blog (and perhaps even if you haven’t), you are by now aware that such claims cannot be taken at face value.

You might suspect, for example, that the study was sponsored by a drug company and authored by researchers with financial interests tied to those drug companies. You might wonder if these associations could possibly – just possibly – influence not only the results of the study, but how those results are reported. You might also find yourself questioning the objectivity of a study with the title “Justification for the Use of Statins in Prevention: an Intervention Trial Evaluating Rosuvastatin” (JUPITER).

If you’re asking yourself these questions, you are definitely on the right track. The study was indeed sponsored by a drug company, AstraZeneca. And each author of this study received money in the form of grants, consulting fees and honoraria from pharmaceutical companies – in some cases up to twelve different companies, including AstraZeneca, the study sponsor. Take a look at this list detailing the financial interests of the study authors (now required by the New England Journal of Medicine and other prominent publications):

Dr. Ridker reports receiving grant support from AstraZeneca, Novartis, Merck, Abbott, Roche, and Sanofi-Aventis; consulting fees or lecture fees or both from AstraZeneca, Novartis, Merck, Merck–Schering-Plough, Sanofi-Aventis, Isis, Dade Behring, and Vascular Biogenics; and is listed as a coinventor on patents held by Brigham and Women’s Hospital that relate to the use of inflammatory biomarkers in cardiovascular disease, including the use of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein in the evaluation of patients’ risk of cardiovascular disease. These patents have been licensed to Dade Behring and AstraZeneca. Dr. Fonseca reports receiving research grants, lecture fees, and consulting fees from AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Schering-Plough, Sanofi-Aventis, and Merck; and Dr. Genest, lecture fees from AstraZeneca, Schering-Plough, Merck–Schering-Plough, Pfizer, Novartis, and Sanofi-Aventis and consulting fees from AstraZeneca, Merck, Merck Frosst, Schering-Plough, Pfizer, Novartis, Resverlogix, and Sanofi-Aventis. Dr. Gotto reports receiving consulting fees from Dupont, Novartis, Aegerion, Arisaph, Kowa, Merck, Merck–Schering-Plough, Pfizer, Genentech, Martek, and Reliant; serving as an expert witness; and receiving publication royalties. Dr. Kastelein reports receiving grant support from AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Roche, Novartis, Merck, Merck–Schering-Plough, Isis, Genzyme, and Sanofi-Aventis; lecture fees from AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Novartis, Merck–Schering-Plough, Roche, Isis, and Boehringer Ingelheim; and consulting fees from AstraZeneca, Abbott, Pfizer, Isis, Genzyme, Roche, Novartis, Merck, Merck–Schering-Plough, and Sanofi-Aventis. Dr. Koenig reports receiving grant support from AstraZeneca, Roche, Anthera, Dade Behring and GlaxoSmithKline; lecture fees from AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Novartis, GlaxoSmithKline, DiaDexus, Roche, and Boehringer Ingelheim; and consulting fees from GlaxoSmithKline, Medlogix, Anthera, and Roche. Dr. Libby reports receiving lecture fees from Pfizer and lecture or consulting fees from AstraZeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Pfizer, Sanofi-Aventis, VIA Pharmaceuticals, Interleukin Genetics, Kowa Research Institute, Novartis, and Merck–Schering-Plough. Dr. Lorenzatti reports receiving grant support, lecture fees, and consulting fees from AstraZeneca, Takeda, and Novartis; Dr. Nordestgaard, lecture fees from AstraZeneca, Sanofi-Aventis, Pfizer, Boehringer Ingelheim, and Merck and consulting fees from AstraZeneca and BG Medicine; Dr. Shepherd, lecture fees from AstraZeneca, Pfizer, and Merck and consulting fees from AstraZeneca, Merck, Roche, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Nicox, and Oxford Biosciences; and Dr. Glynn, grant support from AstraZeneca and Bristol-Myers Squibb. No other potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.
 
Now, the fact that these researchers receive money from all of these drug companies doesn’t mean that they are dishonest or that their data are invalid. However, if you think these conflicts of interest do not influence the outcomes of clinical research, then I suggest you read an article I published a few months ago called When It Comes To Drug Claims, Skepticism Is Healthy.

Now that you’ve put on your “Healthy Skeptic” goggles, we can move on and more closely examine the study itself. There are several things you need to be aware of as we discuss it.

First, although the press articles claim that the study looked at statin use in healthy populations, the subjects were people who had normal cholesterol but high CRP levels. CRP, or C-Reactive Protein, is a measure of inflammation in the body. It is now widely accepted even in the mainstream medical community that inflammation is a major risk factor for heart disease. And because inflammation is a sign of an underlying disease process, these patients were not, in fact, “healthy” as claimed.

There is little doubt that statins reduce inflammation, which can help prevent atherosclerosis. It appears that the benefits of statins are mainly due to this characteristic, rather than to their cholesterol-lowering effects. So it’s no surprise that the statins reduced rates of heart disease and mortality in this population that had inflammation going into the study.

I should also mention, however, that the predictive value of CRP for heart disease is highly controversial. Though some studies show a correlation between high CRP levels and heart disease, many others do not. Many physicians feel that CRP is not a useful indicator in clinical practice.

The second thing you need to be aware of is the difference between relative and absolute risk reduction. Relative risk reduction (RRR) measures how much the risk is reduced in the experimental group compared to a control group. Absolute risk reduction (ARR) is just the absolute difference in outcome rates between the control and treatment groups.

To make this more clear, let’s consider an example. Say that 2000 people enter a study for a particular drug and 1000 of them are randomized to placebo. At the end of the study, one person in the drug group died versus two people in the placebo group. The relative risk reduction of the drug group would thus be 50% (0.002 – 0.001/0.002). That sounds really impressive! The headline for this study might read “New drug reduces chance of dying by 50%!”. While technically true, you can see how misleading this can be. Why? Because when most people read that headline, they will interpret it to mean that if they take that drug, their risk of dying will be reduced by 50%, which is not even close to being true.

The absolute risk reduction, on the other hand, is always a much more modest number. Using the same example above, the absolute risk reduction in the drug group would have been a paltry one-tenth of a percent, or 0.1% (0.002 – 0.001). That’s not a very catchy headline, is it? “New drug reduces risk of dying by one-tenth of a percent”. It just doesn’t grab you the same way. But this is actually a more realistic view of what happened in the study and what we could expect to happen in the real world.

In fact, one could just as accurately say that in this hypothetical study, a patient has a 1-in-1000 (0.1%) chance of their life being saved by the drug. Said another way, 1,000 patients would have to be treated with this drug in order to save a single life. This measurement is called the Needed Number to Treat, and is another means for interpreting the results of clinical trials.

With that in mind, let’s examine the data from the JUPITER study. The actual numbers were 198 deaths out of 8901 in the statin group and 247 deaths out of 8901 in the placebo group. The relative risk reduction for total mortality (deaths) in the drug group was 19.8% [(247/8901 - 198/8901) / (247/8901)]. That means that the risk of death for people taking Crestor was 19.8% smaller than those taking placebo.

But what happens when we look at the absolute risk reduction numbers? According to the data, 2.77% (0.02774) of people taking the placebo died after two years versus 2.24% (0.02224) of people taking Crestor. This amounts to a difference of 0.55%, or one-half of one percent.

Here’s a graphical illustration of the difference in mortality between the Crestor and placebo group:
jupiter graph
If you’re having trouble making much of a difference, I don’t blame you!

To make this even more clear, let’s use the Needed Number to Treat method of evaluating these results. According to the study data, 182 people would have to be treated with Crestor for two years in order to save a single life.

Now that may not sound like a large number to you, especially if yours was one of the lives saved. However, when evaluating the viability of any potential treatment three considerations (above and beyond the efficacy of the treatment) must be taken into account: cost, side effects, and alternatives.

Let’s look at cost first. The cost of one patient taking Crestor for one year is approximately $1,300. Therefore, to prevent 49 deaths 8,901 people would have to take Crestor for two years at a cost of $23 million dollars. That is an enormously expensive treatment by any measure.

Second, this particular study did not register significant side effects in the statin group. This is very fishy, though, since nearly every other study on statins to date has shown significant side effects and the approval of Crestor itself was delayed by the FDA due to concern about Crestor side effects.

While all statins are associated with rare instances of rhabdomyolysis, a breakdown of muscle cells, Crestor had shown in studies before its approval that the potentially deadly disease had surfaced in seven people. Crestor’s potential muscle- and liver-damaging side effects become more worrisome and difficult to justify in patients who are essentially healthy.

What’s more, the study only lasted two years. That’s not long enough to adequately establish safety for the drug, especially if people are going to use it “preventatively”, which means they could be taking it for several years and even decades. Statins have caused cancer in every single animal study to date. Since cancer can take up to 25 years to develop after initial exposure to the carcinogen, we simply cannot know at this point that statins won’t also significantly increase the risk of cancer in adults.

Finally, before jumping on the statin bandwagon and recommending that we spend billions of dollars treating healthy people with Crestor, we should consider if there isn’t a less costly and risky way of preventing deaths due to inflammation and heart disease.

Wouldn’t you know it, there sure is!

For the last decade medical research has increasingly demonstrated that heart disease is caused not by high cholesterol levels, but by inflammation and oxidative damage. A full explanation of these mechanisms is beyond the scope of this post, but for more details you can read two previous articles: Cholesterol Doesn’t Cause Heart Disease and How To Increase Your Risk of Heart Disease.

So, if we want to prevent and even treat heart disease, we need to address the causes of inflammation and oxidative damage. Again, there’s not room to go into great detail on this here but in general the primary causes of inflammation and oxidative damage are 1) a diet high in polyunsaturated oil (PUFA) and refined flour and sugar, 2) lack of physical activity, 3) stress and 4) smoking.

We can thus prevent heart disease by avoiding PUFA and refined/processed food, getting adequate exercise, reducing stress and not smoking. These simple dietary and lifestyle changes are likely to produce even better results than a statin, for a fraction of the cost and without any side effects. In fact, the only side effects of this approach are improved physiological and psychological health! For more specific recommendations, read my article Preventing Heart Disease Without Drugs.

Taking a statin to “prevent” inflammation and heart disease is rather like bailing water with a pail to prevent a boat from sinking instead of simply plugging the leak. Unfortunately, our entire health care system is oriented around “bailing water with a pail”, which is to say treating the symptoms of disease, instead of “plugging the leak”, or addressing the causes of disease before it develops. The reason this is the case is because there’s a lot more money to be made from drugs, surgery and other costly interventions than there is from encouraging people to eat well, exercise and reduce stress.

Even if we ignore all of the issues I’ve pointed out above, the best thing we can say about this study is that a small group of unusual patients – those with low LDL-cholesterol AND high C-reactive protein – may slightly decrease their risk for all-cause mortality by taking a drug that costs them almost $1,300 per year and slightly increases their risk for developing diabetes.

That’s the best spin possible given the data from this study. Compare that to the mainstream media headlines, and you’ll have a clear understanding of how financial conflicts of interest are seriously damaging the integrity and value of clinical research.

At least the media wasn’t completely fooled. They did manage to at least include the perspective of sane doctors who questioned the desirability of millions of relatively healthy people taking drugs for the rest of their lives. According to the Wall Street Journal:
Moreover, despite large relative benefits, the actual number of patients helped was small. Those on the drug suffered 142 major cardiovascular events compared with 251 on placebo, a difference of 109. Dr. Hlatky said that raises questions about the cost-effectiveness of CRP screening and the value of putting millions of low-risk patients on medication for the rest of their lives.
From the New York Times:
Some consumer advocates and doctors raised concerns about the expense of putting relatively healthy patients on statins, which would cost the health system billions of dollars.
From Fox News:

About 120 people would have to take Crestor for two years to prevent a single heart attack, stroke or death, said Stanford University cardiologist Dr. Mark Hlatky. He wrote an editorial accompanying the study published online by the New England Journal of Medicine.

“Everybody likes the idea of prevention. We need to slow down and ask how many people are we going to be treating with drugs for the rest of their lives to prevent heart disease, versus a lot of other things we’re not doing” to improve health, Hlatky said.
If you know of someone who is considering a statin after reading about the JUPITER study, please do them a favor and send them a link to this article first. They should hear both sides of the story before making such a significant decision.
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Read the full article here.

Friday, April 20, 2012

The hidden truth about statins


The hidden truth about statins

June 12, 2010   by Chris Kresser
pillsandmoneyStatins are the most popular drugs in history. Drug companies made $26 billion selling statins alone in 2008. 25 million Americans take them, and the number is growing each year.

One reason why statins are the best-selling drug category by far is that 92% of people taking them are healthy. The FDA has approved the prescription of statins to people at low risk for heart disease and stroke, who don’t even have high cholesterol. Two years ago the American Academy of Pediatricians recommended that statins be prescribed for kids as young as eight years old.

With sales statistics like this, you’d think statins are wonder drugs. But when you look closely at the research, a different story emerges. Statins have never been shown to be effective for women of any age, men over 65, or men without pre-existing heart disease. Early studies did suggest that statins are effective for men under 65 with pre-existing heart disease, but later, more rigorous clinical trials has not confirmed this benefit.

In addition, statins have been shown to have serious side effects and complications in up to 30% of people who take them. Studies have also shown that the majority of these adverse events go unreported, because doctors are largely unaware of the risks of statins.

Watch the two videos below to learn the whole story. Or, you can read this article for a concise summary of the evidence.

Video Presentation

link

Handouts

  • Statin research summary: lists the eight statin studies performed in 2008 – 2009, including the drugs and populations studied and the results. If you’re currently taking a statin, you might consider printing this out and taking it to your doctor as a springboard for a conversation about whether statins are right for you.

References

ENHANCE
KasteleinJJ, AkdimF, StroesES, for ENHANCE investigators. Simvastatin with or without ezetimibe in familial hypercholesterolemia. N Engl J Med 2008;358:1431-43

CASHMERE
O’Riordan M. CASHMERE: no IMT effect with atorvastatin over 12 months. (
link)
ACHIEVE
O’Riordan M. ACHIEVE stopped: IMT study with Niacin/Laropiprant halted by Merck & Co. (
link)
SEAS
Rossebø AB, Pedersen TR, Boman K, et al. Intensive lipid lowering with simvastatin and ezetimibe in aortic stenosis. N Engl J Med 2008;359:1343-56

GISSI-HF
GISSI-HF Investigators, Tavazzi L, Maggioni AP, Marchioli R, et al. Effect of rosuvastatin in patients with chronic heart failure (the GISSI-HF trial): a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Lancet 2008;372:1231-9

CORONA
Kjekshus J, Apetrei E, Barrios V, et al. Rosuvastatin in older patients with systolic heart failure. N Engl J Med 2007;357:2248-61

AURORA
Fellström BC, Jardine AG, Schmieder ME, et al for the AURORA study group. Rosuvastatin and cardiovascular events in patients undergoing hemodialysis. N Engl J Med 2009;360:1395-407

JUPITER
Ridker PM, Danielson E, Fonseca FA, et al, for the JUPITER Study Group. Rosuvastatin to prevent vascular events in men and women with elevated C-Reactive protein. N Engl J Med 2008;359:2195-207

Thursday, March 8, 2012

The Statin Scam - Dr Lundell


lundell_crop_small_131by Dwight C. Lundell M.D.
For 25 years as a thoracic surgeon, my life was passionately dedicated to treating heart disease; I gave many thousands of patients a second chance at life.

Then a few years ago I made the most difficult decision of my medical career. I left the surgery that I loved to have the freedom necessary to speak the truth about heart disease, inflammation, statin medications, and the current methods of treating heart disease.

It was an exciting time to be a young cardiac surgeon in the eighties. A new surgical technique, coronary bypass, was the only effective treatment for people afflicted with severe coronary artery disease. Our ability to save lives increased and the risks of surgery decreased as techniques and technology improved.

Desperately sick and diseased patients could be restored and rehabilitated with relatively low risk, it was an exciting challenge. During my career as a surgeon I performed over 5000 coronary bypass operations.
The consensus at that time was that elevated cholesterol in the blood caused a gradual deposition of cholesterol in the channel of the blood vessel. We had two obvious treatment choices; lower the levels of cholesterol in the blood or do an operation to detour the blood around the accumulated plaque in the artery thus restoring blood flow and function to the heart muscle.

Other than looking at more effective ways to lower blood cholesterol, there was relatively little research going on as to what was causing the plaque. The medical community had settled on the idea that it was as simple as controlling saturated fat and cholesterol.

Statin drugs, the ones your Doctor insists that you take if your cholesterol is slightly elevated and Bernie Madoff ( the now infamous financial fraudster ) have both left in their wake many innocent victims, and many sincere but misled supporters. Both are huge frauds perpetrated on the unsuspecting.

Mr. Madoff, over 30 years swindled people out of about $50 billion. Statins have a worldwide market of over $30 billion annually and have had for many years. In addition, the testing for and treating elevated cholesterol costs about $100 billion annually with no noticeable benefit to the victims, I mean patients.

I'm not sure if Mr. Madoff intended to swindle when he started out, but reading the reports it seems things got out of hand and he had to continue to tell a false story in order to keep the money flowing into his coffers to support his and his supporters' lavish lifestyles, and perpetuate the fraud.

I'm not sure that the statin makers intended to swindle in the beginning but they also were not about to give up on a $30 billion annual market easily. There are many sincere, well intentioned and deeply convinced physicians that will continue to support the theory that dietary cholesterol and saturated fats cause heart disease.

They will continue to believe that cholesterol lowering medications will successfully treat and prevent heart disease in spite of the fact that a study published in The American Heart Journal ( January 2009 ) analyzing 137,000 patients admitted to hospitals in the United States with a heart attack demonstrated that almost 75% had "normal" cholesterol levels.

This fact continued to bother me during my surgical career. The idea that a normal substance, namely cholesterol, would cause heart disease never resonated with me. I would see patients coming back for second coronary bypass operations a few years after their first, having had normal cholesterol levels the entire time. In the operating room I had made the observation that there seemed to be inflammation around the coronary arteries that I was bypassing.

Through brilliant and massive marketing the makers of statin drugs have skillfully influenced science and controlled public policy so that prescribing statin drugs has become the standard of care. Anyone questioning or disagreeing with these policies is labeled as a heretic, disregarded and ridiculed.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration ( FDA ), The National Cholesterol Education Program, The American Heart Association and many academic centers are led and influenced by physicians who receive direct or indirect benefit from the makers of statin drugs.

Their influence is so pervasive that recently the FDA approved Crestor®, a statin, to treat patients with normal cholesterol. Some of these academics have called for treating children with statin drugs. Marketing has truly triumphed over medicine.

Treating or attempting to prevent heart disease with statin drugs is dangerous and fraudulent for two reasons:

1.) Serious, deadly and disabling side effects which are largely ignored by the medical profession and suppressed by the statin makers. These side effects have been brilliantly documented by Dr. Duane Graveline and other brave doctors who dare to speak out against the official religion of cholesterol and saturated fat.

2.) Continued focus on this ineffective treatment diverts attention from truly understanding and controlling heart disease, and gives patients a false sense of security that prevents them from making the lifestyle changes that would truly prevent and reverse heart disease.

Consider also the following:
1.) Statins have not been proven to help any woman of any age!
2.) Statins have not been proven to help anyone over the age of 65!
3.) The only group of patients who may, and I emphasize "may" get any benefit, are middle aged men who have had a previous heart attack.

It is amazing to see all the medical literature that is funded by the statin makers and delivered to doctors' offices by enthusiastic young drug reps that purport to prove that statins are beneficial.

The very best statistical manipulation shows that one must treat at least 10 people for several years for 1 to have possible benefit. I'll bet that when your doctor told you to take statins you were not told that under the most favorable statistical slant on the data there is only 1 chance in 10 that you will benefit.

The much publicized JUPITER study which led the FDA to approve Crestor® for people with normal cholesterol showed that treating 100 people for 3 years with Crestor® "may" have prevented one heart attack.

Yet the approval was granted and millions of people were exposed to the risks of statins with no possible benefit except to the maker of Crestor®. Do you think the process is pure and clean and free of improper influence?

Just as a point of reference, if I had treated 100 people with the correct antibiotic for an infection 99 would have been cured. This is why I call statin treatment a scam that is bigger and more harmful than anything Bernie Madoff pulled off, at least his victims only lost money, not their health.

In spite of being Chief of Staff and Chief of Surgery at a large specialty heart hospital I found that I could not change Medicine no matter how much I preached and pleaded, no matter how much scientific evidence I gathered that cholesterol was not a problem and that treating cholesterol with medications was counter productive.

So I made that difficult decision and left my successful surgical practice in order to have the freedom to speak, write and teach the truth about heart disease. I wrote a book The Cure for Heart Disease, which explains that the real cause of heart disease is low grade inflammation. For without inflammation cholesterol would never accumulate in the wall of the blood vessel and cause plaque with its eventual consequence of heart attack and death.

Dwight C. Lundell M.D.
www.thecureforheartdisease.net
Chief Medical Consultant, Asantae Inc.
Chief Medical Consultant at www.realweight.com

Dr. Lundell's experience in Cardiovascular & Thoracic Surgery over the last 25 years includes certification by the American Board of Surgery, the American Board of Thoracic Surgery, and the Society of Thoracic Surgeons.
Dr. Lundell was a pioneer in off-pump coronary artery bypass or "beating heart" surgery reducing surgical complications and recovery times.
He has served as Chief resident at the University of Arizona and Yale University Hospitals and later served as Chief of Staff and Chief of Surgery.
He was one of the founding partners of the Lutheran Heart Hospital which became the second largest Heart hospital in the U.S.


January, 2011
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http://www.spacedoc.com/statin_scam

Monday, January 9, 2012

Statin-induced diabetes: perhaps, it’s the tip of the iceberg

From: Oxford University Press Quarterly Journal of Medicine.
http://qjmed.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2010/11/29/qjmed.hcq230.full

Statin-induced diabetes: perhaps, it’s the tip of the iceberg

The meta-analysis by Mills et al.1 involving 170 255 patients randomized in 76 trials reported on the efficacy and safety of statin therapy for the prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and found a relative 9% increased risk in the development of incident diabetes (P = 0.001) among subjects randomized to statins compared with placebo in the 17 trials reporting on diabetes development. It is noteworthy that the average age of the subjects in the meta-analysis was 59.6 years, average follow-up was 2.7 years and more than half of the subjects were randomized for the primary prevention of CVD. We feel that the implications of statin-induced diabetes are not trivial, but of major concern, particularly in the primary prevention of CVD when statin therapy might be used for decades in individuals at relatively low risk2; many questions need answering before statin therapy can be safely recommended across broad populations.

Interestingly, a recently published meta-analysis involving 91 140 patients randomized in 13 trials3 specifically looking at the risk of incident diabetes from statin therapy also revealed a significant 9% increased relative risk of the development of diabetes over a mean overall trial period of 4 years. Disturbingly, 2 of the 13 trials demonstrated very high incidence of the development of diabetes among the statin-treated subjects. The Justification for the Use of Statins in Prevention: an Intervention Trial Evaluating Rosuvastatin (JUPITER),4 a primary prevention trial of 1.9-year duration in subjects with a mean age of 66 years, demonstrated a significant relative increase in diabetes incidence of 26% among subjects randomized to rosuvastatin; the absolute rate of incident diabetes expressed in events per 1000 patient-years was 13 and 16 among the placebo and rosuvastatin subjects, respectively. Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol was decreased robustly by 50% in the rosuvastatin subjects and the median LDL cholesterol at the end of follow-up was 55 mg/dl. The PROspective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk (PROSPER),5 a combined primary and secondary prevention trial of 3.2-year duration in subjects with a mean age of 76 years, demonstrated a significant relative increase in diabetes incidence of 32% among subjects randomized to pravastatin; the absolute rate of incident diabetes expressed in events per 1000 patient-years was 16 and 21 among the placebo and pravastatin subjects, respectively. LDL cholesterol was decreased by 31% in the pravastatin subjects. Therefore, it appears that the risk of statin-induced diabetes is more prominent with aggressive LDL cholesterol lowering and among the elderly subjects. It is of concern that thought leaders in the cardiovascular arena strongly suggest that statin use should be increased from 16 to 100 million people in the USA and LDL cholesterol should be aggressively lowered.6 This issue takes even more relevance given that the prevalence of diabetes is rapidly increasing in the USA7 and worldwide8; alarmingly, three-quarters of the elderly in the USA have diabetes or pre-diabetes.7

In vivo studies have demonstrated that despite lowering LDL cholesterol levels, some9–11 but not all statins11 significantly increase fasting plasma insulin levels and significantly decrease insulin sensitivity in hypercholesterolemic patients in a dose-dependent manner. Statins can significantly increase fasting plasma insulin levels and glycated hemoglobin levels in the absence of significant changes in fasting glucose.9–11 Additionally, some statins have been shown to significantly decrease plasma adiponectin levels.10,11

In vitro and animal studies12,13 have shown that statins can significantly decrease the expression of the insulin-responsive glucose transporter 4 (GLUT4) in adipocytes. GLUT4 is distributed in the intracellular compartment in the basal state and relocates to the cell membrane in response to insulin signaling. Moreover, statins increase the expression of GLUT112 in adipocytes; GLUT1 is localized in the cell membrane. It is unclear how statins change the expression of GLUT1 and GLUT4; perhaps, it is related to an inhibition of isoprenoid biosynthesis by statins12 or cholesterol lowering, leading to a change in membrane lipid raft structure resulting in decreased insulin signaling.14 Since GLUT4 concentrations are not reduced in skeletal muscle in obese subjects and subjects with diabetes, and skeletal muscle is the primary source of insulin-stimulated glucose disposal, it has been argued that whole-body insulin sensitivity cannot be explained by a decrease in the production of GLUT415; however, it has been shown that the downregulation of GLUT4 and resulting glucose transport in adipose tissue can cause insulin resistance.16 It is notable that GLUT4 concentrations are decreased in skeletal muscle in elderly compared with younger subjects,15 which might explain why the elderly are more sensitive to the diabetes promoting effects of statin therapy. Furthermore, dysregulation of cellular cholesterol may attenuate pancreatic β-cell function, since cholesterol maintains normal function of voltage gated calcium channels and is vital in the mobilization and fusion of insulin granules with the cell membrane.17 In summation, there are many ways by which statin therapy might lead to hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance, prediabetes and diabetes.

In addition to the classic complications of diabetes such as CVD, renal failure, blindness and neuropathy, epidemiological studies demonstrate that diabetes is related to the increased risk of many cancers.18 These include liver, pancreas, kidney, endometrial, colorectal, bladder and breast cancer and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. A large European population study with a median follow-up of 15.8 years has shown that compared with individuals with normal glucose tolerance, men and women with prediabetes or diabetes had a significant increase in cancer mortality, irrespective of the body mass index.19 There is epidemiological evidence that insulin resistance is associated with cancer in Eastern populations.20 Interestingly visceral fat mass, assessed by computed tomography, but not subcutaneous fat mass, correlates positively with cancer21; indeed, visceral fat is a strong determinant of insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia.

There are many ways by which hyperinsulinemia can promote cancer.18,22 Hyperinsulinemia results in an increase in the biologically active free circulating insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) by increasing hepatic IGF-1 production22 and decreasing IGF-1 binding proteins.18 Tumor cells are replete with IGF-1 receptors and two isoforms of insulin receptors (IR-A and IR-B).23 IGF-1 primarily signals through the IGF-1 receptor resulting in mitogenic effects and, not surprisingly, higher IGF-1 blood levels have been associated with an increased risk of several cancers.24,25 Insulin signaling through the IR-A and IR-B results in mitogenic and metabolic effects, respectively.22 Hyperinsulinemia can persist for decades in prediabetic states and it is certainly conceivable that this prolonged mitogenic stimulus increases cancer promotion as has been seen in epidemiological studies.

Statin therapy might affect tumor metabolism by insulin independent means. As previously mentioned, some statins decrease adiponectin levels.10,11 This is potentially problematic over the long-term since adiponectin is anti-proliferative and anti-angiogenic and has other oncostatic properties.26 Furthermore, obesity is associated with lower circulating adiponectin levels and this might partially explain the association of obesity and various cancers. Additionally, the fact that statin therapy might increase GLUT1 expression12 is of concern since GLUT1 is already overexpressed and is the main glucose transporter in cancer cells.27 Glucose uptake by cancer cells is extremely avid and up to 30 times that of normal cells and utilized by glycolysis for energy and supplying important metabolites for rapid cellular proliferation.28 Indeed, in human studies, increased expression of GLUT1 in cancer cells has been associated with poor prognosis of many cancers.27,29

The Western diet is permissive to the diabetogenic effects of statin therapy. The prevalence of obesity has been steadily increasing in the USA and more than two-thirds of adults are overweight or obese.30 As mentioned, the prevalence of diabetes has been increasing in the USA and a majority of the elderly subjects in the USA now have pre-diabetes or diabetes.7 Interestingly, total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol have been decreasing in the USA likely due to cholesterol awareness and the increased use of lipid-lowering medication, and more than half of the elderly subjects in the USA have reported using lipid-lowering medications.31 However, blood triglyceride levels have been steadily increasing despite the increasing use of lipid-lowering therapy.31 Intriguingly, it is now believed that abnormalities in fatty acid metabolism are at the root of diabetes, and ectopic lipid accumulation in muscle, liver and pancreatic β-cells leads to the development of insulin resistance by interfering with insulin signaling.32,33 The increase in blood triglyceride levels is driven by a high carbohydrate diet and partially fueled by the increase in dietary sweetener consumption.34 Unfortunately, fructose consumption, largely from sweetened beverages, has escalated drastically in North America over the past three decades35 and excessive fructose intake leads to increased hepatic de novo lipogenesis resulting in hepatic steatosis, visceral fat accumulation and ectopic lipid deposition in skeletal muscle, thereby all leading to insulin resistance.

We are living in times when there seems to be a much stronger emphasis on the use of drugs over lifestyle change to prevent disease. The food industry has been uncooperative and blames personal responsibility as a cause of the obesity problem.36 There is a belief among many patients that they can eat whatever they want as long as they are on statin therapy.37 This has been amplified by a proposal to offer powdered statin in packets to be sprinkled on hamburgers at fast-food restaurants in order to neutralize the detrimental effect of the food choice.38 Plant-based diets have been shown to decrease both CVD and cancer risk and even result in a rapid change in gene expression in neoplastic tissue, and they are not diabetogenic.39–41 Moreover, a Mediterranean diet has been shown to counter the insulin raising effects of simvastatin therapy.42 It is extremely troubling that a goal has been proposed for decreasing the LDL cholesterol levels of all subjects worldwide to below 100 mg/dl and ideally below 60 mg/dl by statin therapy.43

In conclusion, many important questions need answering before expanding the use of statin therapy, particularly for the primary prevention of CVD. In what proportion of subjects do statins increase plasma insulin levels, even if there is no progression to diabetes? Are some statins more likely than others to cause hyperinsulinemia because of physiochemical differences? Will prolonged statin therapy result in chronic hyperinsulinemia and potentially increase prediabetes, diabetes and/or cancer? Will this risk outweigh any perceived benefits, particularly in the elderly or in aggressively treated patients? Will the Western diet and lifestyle encourage the use of more statin therapy and provide a metabolic substrate to further perpetuate hyperinsulinemia and its subsequent complications? Is the increase in diabetes prevalence in the elderly subjects fueled partially by the increasing use of statins in this age group? What statins decrease blood adiponectin levels, and is it continuous, and, if so, what are the long-term clinical implications? How should physicians monitor patients for the adverse metabolic effects of statin therapy? Should subjects have a plasma insulin level measured prior to initiating and during statin therapy? What diet or diets will mitigate the hyperinsulinemic effects of statin therapy? Will statin therapy used by subjects with a history of cancer increase the chance of hyperinsulinemia increasing the promotion of occult micrometastatic disease? Finally, physicians should realize that statin-induced diabetes, as seen in the relatively short-term clinical trials, might be just the tip of the iceberg, and properly designed clinical trials must be done to determine what else lurks beneath the water in order to ensure the safety of patients on long-term treatment with these drugs.