Literature DB >> 19273782

Long-term benefit of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol-raising therapy with bezafibrate: 16-year mortality follow-up of the bezafibrate infarction prevention trial.

Ilan Goldenberg1, Valentina Boyko, Alexander Tennenbaum, David Tanne, Solomon Behar, Victor Guetta.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Major randomized trials of fibrate therapy demonstrate an inverse relationship between on-treatment high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) increments and clinical outcome. We hypothesized that the degree of HDL-C response to bezafibrate is independently associated with subsequent long-term mortality.
METHODS: The risk of death at 16 years of follow-up among 3026 patients with coronary heart disease allocated to the original bezafibrate (n = 1509) and placebo (n = 1517) arms of the Bezafibrate Infarction Prevention (BIP) trial was related to HDL-C response to bezafibrate therapy, categorized as upper-tertile (>8 mg/dL) or lower-tertile (< or =8 mg/dL) on-treatment HDL-C change.
RESULTS: Multivariate analysis demonstrated that patients allocated to bezafibrate therapy experienced a significant 11% reduction (P = .06) in the risk of long-term mortality compared with placebo-allocated patients. Mortality reduction among bezafibrate-allocated patients was related to a significant 22% (P = .008) reduction in the risk of death in patients with an upper-tertile HDL-C response to therapy, whereas among patients with a lower HDL-C response, the risk of death was similar to that of the placebo group (hazard ratio, 0.95; P = .43). Accordingly, the cumulative probability of death at 16 years was significantly lower among bezafibrate-allocated patients with an upper-tertile HDL-C response (32.1%) compared with the placebo group (37.9%; P = .02), whereas patients with a lower HDL-C response to treatment displayed a mortality rate (36.8%) similar to the placebo group (P = .57).
CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that HDL-C level-raising therapy with bezafibrate is associated with long-term mortality reduction that may be related to the degree of HDL-C response to treatment.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19273782     DOI: 10.1001/archinternmed.2008.584

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Intern Med        ISSN: 0003-9926


  13 in total

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Authors:  Michael J Haas; Arshag D Mooradian
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Review 5.  Combination therapy of statins and fibrates in the management of cardiovascular risk.

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Authors:  Alexander Tenenbaum; Enrique Z Fisman
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8.  Cardiovascular events in patients received combined fibrate/statin treatment versus statin monotherapy: Acute Coronary Syndrome Israeli Surveys data.

Authors:  Alexander Tenenbaum; Diego Medvedofsky; Enrique Z Fisman; Liudmila Bubyr; Shlomi Matetzky; David Tanne; Robert Klempfner; Joseph Shemesh; Ilan Goldenberg
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9.  Baseline diabetes as a way to predict CV outcomes in a lipid-modifying trial: a meta-analysis of 330,376 patients from 47 landmark studies.

Authors:  Michel P Hermans; Evariste Bouenizabila; Daniel K Amoussou-Guenou; Sylvie A Ahn; Michel F Rousseau
Journal:  Cardiovasc Diabetol       Date:  2015-05-21       Impact factor: 9.951

Review 10.  Cholesteryl ester transfer protein: at the heart of the action of lipid-modulating therapy with statins, fibrates, niacin, and cholesteryl ester transfer protein inhibitors.

Authors:  M John Chapman; Wilfried Le Goff; Maryse Guerin; Anatol Kontush
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2009-10-12       Impact factor: 29.983

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