|
By EMMA ROSS : AP Medical Writer
Jun 12, 2003 : 7:59 pm ET
LONDON -- Most adult diabetics should be
taking cholesterol-lowering drugs even if they have healthy
cholesterol levels and no evidence of heart disease, a major new
study has concluded.
The results, which found that statin drugs
cut the risk of heart attacks, strokes and the need for angioplasty
or bypass surgery in diabetics by one-third, emerge from the largest
study ever to test the power of statins.
Experts say the findings, published this week
in The Lancet medical journal, demand a change in current
recommendations, which do not advise statin therapy for diabetics
unless cholesterol levels are elevated.
Statins -- sold under such brand names as
Zocor, Pravachol, Lipitor, Mevacor and Lescol -- are taken by 25
million people worldwide at risk of dying from heart disease.
Diabetics do not generally receive cholesterol-lowering therapy,
although they have a particularly high risk of heart trouble.
If the new findings are acted on, about 100
million diabetics worldwide would become candidates for
cholesterol-lowering treatment, according to the researchers from
Oxford University in England.
They estimated this could prevent about 1
million heart attacks, strokes and angioplasty or bypass operations
each year worldwide.
"This research proves that statins can offer
real benefits to many people with diabetes, helping them to avoid
some of the life-threatening complications of diabetes," said Simon
O'Neill of Diabetes UK, a patient advocacy group.
The study was partially financed by Merck &
Co., which makes Zocor, the statin used in the research.
In the study, 5,963 diabetics aged 40 or
older and 14,573 non-diabetics with artery disease were randomly
given either 40 mg of Zocor or fake pills every day for five years.
About 10,000 people were allocated the drug and another 10,000 the
fake tablets.
About 25 percent of people assigned the fake
pills had a heart attack, stroke or needed angioplasty or bypass
surgery, compared with about 20 percent of those given the statins.
The study found that among both the diabetics
and the non-diabetics with artery problems, the risk of such
problems was about one-quarter lower in the people assigned statins
than in those allocated the dummy pills.
However, the investigators said the true
benefit of statins was underestimated by those calculations because
some people assigned fake pills ended up taking statins but were
counted in the fake pill group, diluting the real difference between
the treatments.
"We can estimate that the benefit that we saw
-- a reduction of about 25 percent -- is about two-thirds of what
the effect of actually using the tablets would be," said Dr. Jane
Armitage, one of the study's investigators. She said the scientists
estimated the true effect is a one-third reduction in the risk of
heart attacks, strokes or artery operations.
About half the diabetics in the study had no
evidence of heart disease. About half had normal or below-average
cholesterol levels. Those patients seemed to benefit as much as the
others, Armitage said.
"Statin therapy should now be considered
routinely for all diabetic patients at sufficiently high risk of
major vascular events, irrespective of their initial cholesterol
concentrations," said epidemiologist Rory Collins, the study's
leader.
Armitage said investigators stopped short of
recommending statins for all adult diabetics because for some people
newly diagnosed in their 20s or 30s, the risk of heart trouble may
not be so high.
Dr. Lars Lindholm, a professor of public
health and clinical medicine at Umea University in Sweden who was
not connected with the research, said the evidence from the study
for such a recommendation was clear.
"One could even go a step further and ask
whether all patients with type II diabetes should be given a statin,
regardless of their cholesterol value," he said.
|