| Literature DB >> 26132393 |
Beatrice A Golomb1, Joel E Dimsdale2, Hayley J Koslik1, Marcella A Evans1, Xun Lu3, Steven Rossi4, Paul J Mills2, Halbert L White3, Michael H Criqui5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Low/ered cholesterol is linked to aggression in some study designs. Cases/series have reported reproducible aggression increases on statins, but statins also bear mechanisms that could reduce aggression. Usual statin effects on aggression have not been characterized.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26132393 PMCID: PMC4488854 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Baseline Comparability Across Randomization Arms (Mean ± SD*).
| Placebo | Statin Pooled | Pravastatin | Simvastatin | Statin comparisons to placebo | |
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| 57.4 | 56.8 | 57.1 ± 12.0 | 56.6 ± 12.0 | NS all |
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| 67.8 | 68.2 | 68.0 | 68.5 | NS all |
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| 81.9 | 80.9 | 81.7 | 80.1 | NS all |
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| 8.77 | 8.01 | 8.58 | 7.44 | NS all |
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| 5.72 | 5.88 | 5.84 ± 1.47 | 5.91 ± 1.55 | NS all |
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| 229 ± 27.8 | 229 | 232 ± 30.9 | 226 ± 29.2 | NS all |
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| 52.5 ± 15.4 | 52.0 ± 15.6 | 53.1 ± 16.2 | 50.8 ± 15.0 | NS all |
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| 136 ± 79.6 | 136 ± 73.8 | 138 ± 75.1 | 135 ± 72.6 | NS all |
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| 150 ± 26.1 | 150 ± 25.1 | 152 ± 26.4 | 149 ± 23.6 | NS all |
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| 4.67 ± 1.24 | 4.73 ± 1.40 | 4.72 ± 1.56 | 4.75 ± 1.21 | NS all |
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| 90.0 ± 9.08 | 90.2 ± 9.11 | 89.9 ± 8.65 | 90.5 ± 9.55 | NS all |
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| 126 ± 14.2 | 127 ± 14.4 | 127 ± 13.7 | 128 ± 15.0 | NS all |
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| 73.9 ± 8.79 | 75.2 ± 8.80 | 75.4 ± 8.98 | 75.0 ± 8.63 |
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| 185 ± 41.0 | 185 ± 33.6 | 184 ± 33.7 | 186 ± 33.6 | NS all |
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| 98.2 ± 13.8 | 98.0 ± 11.8 | 97.6 ± 11.6 | 98.3 ± 12.1 | NS all |
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| 873 ± 335 | 868 ± 322 | 872 ± 342 | 864 ± 302 | NS all |
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| 3.07 ± 2.30 | 3.17 ± 2.31 | 3.18 ± 2.35 | 3.17 ± 2.28 | NS all |
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| 2.25 ± 5.26 | 2.76 ± 4.73 | 2.81 ± 5.19 | 2.71 ± 4.22 | NS all |
DBP = diastolic blood pressure; HDL = high density lipoprotein cholesterol; LDL = low density lipoprotein cholesterol; NS = nonsignificant; OASMa = Overt-Aggression-Scale-Modified–Aggression-Subscale; SBP = systolic blood pressure; TC = total cholesterol. Except items designated as %.
† DBP: P = 0.04 placebo vs. statin; and P = 0.04 placebo vs. pravastatin.
NS (P>0.1) placebo vs. simvastatin; and simvastatin vs. pravastatin.
Weight and waist circumference were assessed at the screening visit (values shown are for randomized participants only). All other measures were assessed at the baseline visit. Conversion factors: To convert cholesterol (LDL, HDL, TC) from mg/mL to mmol/L, multiply by 0.0259. To convert triglyceride from mg/dL to mmol/L, multiply by 0.0113. To convert glucose from mg/dL to mmol/L, multiply by 0.0555. Baseline OASMa was not predicted by baseline testosterone: β = -0.020 (SE = 0.12) P = 0.87.
Sex is a Significant Effect Modifier.
Sex-by-Statin Interaction Term Significance.
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| Statin vs placebo: N = 970 | Simva vs placebo: N = 646 | Prava vs placebo: N = 647 | |
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| -1.2 (0.45) | -1.4 (0.54) | -0.93 (0.53) |
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| -2.1, -0.33 | -2.5, -0.38 | -2.0, 0.11 |
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| Statin vs placebo: N = 514 | Simva vs placebo: N = 344 | Prava vs placebo: N = 364 | |
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| -1.3 (0.38) | -1.1 (0.46) | -1.4 (0.50) |
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| -2.0, -0.53 | -2.0, -0.21 | -2.4, -0.45 |
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Beta = regression coefficient; CI = confidence interval; OASMa = Overt-Aggression-Scale-Modified–Aggression-Subscale; Prava = pravastatin; SE = standard error; Simva = simvastatin. Regressions (robust SEs) adjust for baseline OASMa, as a primary source of change variance; the sex-interaction, and (as required) the individual components of the interaction term. Excludes outliers (OASMa absolute change >40 points). Without exclusion of outliers: Results lose significance for the full group. Results remain identical for the No Baseline Aggression group (all aggression outliers had nonzero baseline aggression).
Fig 1OASMa Change Values in Men.
OASMa = Overt-Aggression-Scale-Modified–Aggression Subscale. Note that there are 3 values for which the absolute value of change is ≥40 that are clearly separated from the main distribution. These are the designated outliers.
Statin Effects on Aggression in Men.
OASMa Change, Comparing Statin Group to Placebo.
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| 664 | -0.91 (0.50) | -1.9, 0.07 |
| 443 | -0.79 (0.59) | -2.0, 0.37 |
| 441 | -1.0 (0.49) | -2.0, -0.06 |
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| 339 | -0.43 (0.21) | -0.84, -0.02 |
| 226 | -0.46 (0.27) | -0.99, 0.07 |
| 242 | -0.41 (0.25) | -0.90, 0.09 |
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| 325 | -0.90 (1.0) | -2.9, 1.1 |
| 217 | -0.51 (1.2) | -2.8, 1.8 |
| 199 | -1.4 (1.0) | -3.4, 0.65 |
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| 661 | -1.3 (0.39) | -2.0, -0.53 |
| 441 | -1.4 (0.43) | -2.2, -0.53 |
| 440 | -1.2 (0.46) | -2.1, -0.31 |
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| 339 | -0.43 (0.21) | -0.84, -0.02 |
| 226 | -0.46 (0.27) | -0.99, 0.07 |
| 242 | -0.41 (0.25) | -0.90, 0.09 |
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| 322 | -1.6 (0.76) | -3.1, -0.16 |
| 215 | -1.6 (0.80) | -3.1, 0.03 |
| 198 | -1.8 (0.93) | -3.6, 0.07 |
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CI = confidence interval; OASMa = Overt-Aggression-Scale-Modified–Aggression-Subscale; SD = standard deviation.
Regression Including Both Sleep Problems and Testosterone: Both Predict Aggression in Men on Statins and Simvastatin (but Not Pravastatin or Placebo).
| Change in Testosterone | Baseline Testosterone | Change in Sleep Problems | Baseline Sleep Problems | |||||||||
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| Beta ± SE | 95% CI | P | Beta ± SE | 95% CI | P | Beta ± SE | 95% CI | P | Beta ± SE | 95% CI | P | |
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| -0.076 ± 0.31 | -0.69, 0.54 | 0.81 | -0.24 ± 0.32 | -0.88, 0.40 | 0.46 | 0.26 ± 0.74 | -1.2, 1.7 | 0.72 | 0.13 ± 0.15 | -0.17, 0.44 | 0.39 |
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| 0.62 ± 0.29 | 0.041, 1.2 |
| 0.78 ± 0.30 | 0.19, 1.4 |
| 2.5 ± 0.59 | 1.3, 3.6 |
| 0.27 ± 0.15 | -0.024, 0.56 | 0.072 |
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| 1.2 ± 0.47 | 0.31, 2.2 |
| 1.3 ± 0.49 | 0.36, 2.3 |
| 3.5 ± 0.84 | 1.8, 5.2 |
| 0.28 ± 0.25 | -0.21, 0.76 | 0.26 |
Beta = regression coefficient; CI = confidence interval; SE = standard error. Findings were nonsignificant for either testosterone or sleep problems (baseline or change) on pravastatin (and on placebo), which did not increase sleep problems and did not significantly reduce testosterone in this study.
Sign of Aggression-Change on Statins vs Placebo in Men.
(Sign of change is insensitive to outliers.)
| OR (SE) | P | 95%CI | |
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| Statins N = 664 | 0.64 (0.097) |
| 0.47, 0.86 |
| Simvastatin N = 443 | 0.52 (0.094) |
| 0.37, 0.75 |
| Pravastatin N = 441 | 0.77 (0.14) |
| 0.54, 1.1 |
CI = confidence interval; OASMa = Overt-Aggression-Scale-Modified–Aggression-Subscale; OR = odds ratio from ordinal logit; SE = standard error. Analysis employs ordinal logit with robust standard errors, not adjusted for baseline OASMa. There is no exclusion of outliers, as no values represent outliers (values are collapsed to -1, 0, +1—reflecting reduction, no change, or increase in aggression, respectively). This analysis is insensitive to large magnitude outliers, as it looks only at direction (sign) not magnitude. For odds ratios derived from ordinal logit, “a unit change in the predictor variable signifies that the odds for the outcome being in a group that is greater than k versus less than or equal to k is the proportional odds times larger” [55].
Men, Stratified at Age 40.
(Note larger number of men in the older group.)
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| Statin | Simvastatin | Pravastatin | ||||||||
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| Mean (SD) | 95%CI | Mean (SD) | 95%CI | P vs placebo | Mean (SD) | 95%CI | P vs placebo | Mean (SD) | 95%CI | P vs placebo | |
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| 0.036 (4.4) | -1.7, 1.8 | -2.3 (5.4) | -3.6, -0.95 |
| -1.7 (4.6) | -3.3, -0.11 | 0.14 | -3.0 (6.2) | -5.4, -0.67 |
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| 0.24 (4.5) | -0.40, 0.89 | -0.86 (4.6) | -1.3, -0.39 |
| -1.0 (4.5) | -1.7, -0.40 |
| -0.68 (4.8) | -1.4, 0.005 |
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| P, difference younger vs older | 0.99 |
| 0.59 |
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CI = confidence interval; OASMa = Overt-Aggression-Scale-Modified–Aggression-Subscale; SD = standard deviation. Magnitude of effect (coefficient) is larger among men under 40, in each statin group. However, there are approximately 6 times as many participants in the over 40 vs the under 40 category, providing greater significance in the simvastatin and statin groups for those age over 40 years, despite smaller effect sizes. Last-on-treatment-value-carried-forward analysis. Excludes the 3 outliers.
Double Stratification: By Age and Baseline Aggression.
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| “Low Aggression” OASMa = 0 at baseline (There are no outliers in this group; same with and without outliers) | ||||||||||||
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| 40 | -2.4 (0.71) | -3.8, -0.96 |
| 30 | -2.5 (0.89) | -4.4, -0.71 |
| 26 | -2.2 (1.1) | -4.5, 0.09 |
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| 40 | -2.4 (0.71) | -3.8, -0.96 |
| 30 | -2.5 (0.89) | -4.4, -0.71 |
| 26 | -2.2 (1.1) | -4.5, 0.09 |
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| “High Aggression” OASMa > 0 at baseline | ||||||||||||
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| 52 | -0.35 (1.9) | -4.1, 3.4 | 0.85 | 33 | 0.60 (1.8) | -3.0, 4.2 | 0.74 | 31 | -1.4 (2.1) | -5.8, 3.0 | 0.52 |
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| 53 | 1.4 (3.8) | -6.2, 9.1 | 0.71 | 34 | 3.9 (4.8) | -5.9, 13.6 | 0.42 | 31 | -1.4 (2.1) | -5.8, 3.0 | 0.52 |
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| “Low Aggression” OASMa = 0 at baseline (There are no outliers in this group; same with and without outliers) | ||||||||||||
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| 299 | -0.16 (0.21) | -0.57, 0.26 | 0.45 | 196 | -0.15 (0.27) | -0.69, 0.38 | 0.58 | 216 | -0.16 (0.24) | -0.64, 0.32 | 0.50 |
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| 299 | -0.16 (0.21) | -0.57, 0.26 | 0.45 | 196 | -0.15 (0.27) | -0.69, 0.38 | 0.58 | 216 | -0.16 (0.24) | -0.64, 0.32 | 0.50 |
| “High Aggression” OASMa > 0 at baseline | ||||||||||||
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| 270 | -1.8 (0.82) | -3.4, -0.15 |
| 182 | -1.86 (0.89) | -3.6, -0.10 |
| 167 | -1.7 (1.0) | -3.7, 0.34 | 0.10 |
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| 272 | -1.2 (1.0) | -3.2, 0.74 | 0.22 | 183 | -1.3 (1.1) | -3.5, 0.89 | 0.24 | 168 | -1.2 (1.1) | -3.4, 1.0 | 0.29 |
CI = confidence interval; OASMa = Overt-Aggression-Scale-Modified–Aggression-Subscale; SE = standard error. T-tests hold for the larger samples due to the Central Limit theorem, but for those with baseline values of zero, might be deemed problematic for these smaller, under 40 samples. Focusing on findings significant (or near significant) in the table above, however, ordinal logistic regression upholds the basic findings: All excluding outliers: Statin: β = -0.98 (SE = 0.40) (95%CI = -1.8, -0.19) P = 0.015. Simvastatin: β = -1.0 (SE = 0.47) (95%CI = -1.9, -0.10) P = 0.030. Pravastatin: β = -0.82 (SE = 0.43) (95%CI = -1.7, 0.02) P = 0.055. OASMa = 0: Statin: β = -1.9 (SE = 0.72) (95%CI = -3.3, -0.51) P = 0.008. Simvastatin: β = -2.1 (SE = 0.83) (95%CI = -3.7, -0.47) P = 0.01. Pravastatin: β = -1.6 (SE = 0.87) (95%CI = -3.3, 0.13) P = 0.069.
Regression of Testosterone-Change on Aggression-Change in Men on Statins*.
| * | Without Adjustment for LDL | Adjusted for LDL and LDL Change | ||||||||||
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| Change in Testosterone | Baseline Testosterone | Change in Testosterone | Baseline Testosterone | |||||||||
| Beta ± SE | 95% CI | P | Beta ± SE | 95% CI | P | Beta ± SE | 95% CI | P | Beta ± SE | 95% CI | P | |
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| 0.65 ± 0.30 | 0.064, 1.2 |
| 0.83 ± 0.31 | 0.23, 1.4 |
| 0.66 ± 0.31 | 0.055, 1.3 |
| 0.85 ± 0.31 | 0.24, 1.5 |
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| 1.3 ± 0.49 | 0.33, 2.2 |
| 1.5 ± 0.51 | 0.55, 2.5 |
| 1.3 ± 0.51 | 0.32, 2.4 |
| 1.6 ± 0.52 | 0.57, 2.6 |
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Beta = regression coefficient; CI = confidence interval; LDL = low density lipoprotein cholesterol; OASMa = Overt-Aggression-Scale-Modified–Aggression-Subscale; SE = standard error. Change in aggression: Final on-treatment OASMa minus baseline OASMa.
* All regressions adjust for baseline aggression and baseline testosterone (as well as testosterone-change).
† LDL Change is unrelated to aggression decline in these models, in which testosterone values are also adjusted: A change in testosterone (independent variable) predicts a change in aggression (dependent variable) on statins and simvastatin (of the same sign, producing a positive coefficient). The testosterone analysis was not robust to exclusion of influential outliers.
Sleep Problems Predict Aggression in Men on Simvastatin and Combined Statins.
| Change in Sleep Problems | Baseline Sleep Problems | |||||
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| Beta ± SE | 95% CI | P | Beta ± SE | 95% CI | P | |
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| 0.21 ± 0.62 | -1.0, 1.4 | 0.74 | 0.082 ± 0.13 | -0.17, 0.34 | 0.53 |
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| 2.2 ± 0.55 | 1.1, 3.3 |
| 0.23 ± 0.13 | -0.035, 0.49 | 0.089 |
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| 3.3 ± 0.83 | 1.7, 4.9 |
| 0.38 ± 0.23 | -0.068, 0.83 | 0.096 |
Beta = regression coefficient; CI = confidence interval; SE = standard error. Regression analysis assessing prediction of change in aggression by self-rating of change in sleep problems, stratified by treatment arm, adjusted for baseline and change in sleep problems; and baseline aggression (Overt-Aggression-Scale-Modified–Aggression-Subscale).
Fig 2Typical Statin Effects on Testosterone (Decrease) and on Sleep Problems (Increase) Influence Aggression in Opposite Directions.
LDL = low density lipoprotein cholesterol.
Statin Effects on Aggression in Women.
| Statin | Simvastatin | Pravastatin | ||||||||||
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| N | Beta (SE) | 95% CI | P vs placebo | N | Beta (SE) | 95% CI | P vs placebo | N | Beta (SE) | 95% CI | P vs placebo | |
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| 310 | 0.70 (0.34) | 0.035, 1.4 |
| 206 | 0.98 (0.50) | -0.010, 2.0 |
| 207 | 0.40 (0.36) | -0.32, 1.1 | 0.27 |
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| 304 | 0.68 (0.34) | 0.0053, 1.4 |
| 202 | 0.95 (0.51) | -0.054, 2.0 |
| 203 | 0.39 (0.37) | -0.34, 1.1 | 0.30 |
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| 288 | 0.71 (0.35) | 0.018, 1.4 |
| 194 | 1.1 (0.54) | 0.017, 2.2 |
| 194 | 0.33 (0.37) | -0.40, 1.0 | 0.37 |
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| 238 | 0.77 (0.39) | 0.0040, 1.5 |
| 158 | 1.3 (0.61) | 0.11, 2.5 |
| 160 | 0.24 (0.38) | -0.50, 0.98 | 0.52 |
Beta = regression coefficient; CI = confidence interval; OASMa = Overt-Aggression-Scale-Modified–Aggression-Subscale; SE = standard error. A statin x age interaction term, e.g. binarizing at age 55 (years) was significant for simvastatin (P = 0.039), and borderline significant for combined statins (P = 0.092). Women age <45 years, including participant 412: Statin: n = 7; β = -0.79 (SE = 2.5) 95%CI = -7.9, 6.3; P = 0.77. Simvastatin: n = 5; β = 0.15 (SE = 4.8) 95%CI = -20.5, 20.8; P = 0.98. Pravastatin: n = 5; β = -1.2 (SE = 3.3) 95%CI = -15.3, 12.9; P = 0.74. Women age <45 years, excluding participant 412: Statin: n = 6; β = 3.5 (SE = 1.8) 95%CI = -2.2, 9.2; P = 0.15. Simvastatin: n = 4; β = 5.0 (SE = 1.4) 95%CI = -13.0, 23.0; P = 0.18. Pravastatin: n = 4; β = 2.0 (SE = 1.4) 95%CI = -16.0, 20.0; P = 0.39.
Women Stratified by Baseline Aggression Score.
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| 95% CI |
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| 95% CI |
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| 95% CI |
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| 175 |
| 0.24,1.4 |
| 122 |
| 0.16, 1.9 |
| 118 |
| -0.10, 1.4 |
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| 171 |
| 0.20, 1.4 |
| 119 | (0.44) | 0.14, 1.9 |
| 115 |
| -0.16, 1.3 |
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| 163 |
| 0.16, 1.3 |
| 115 |
| 0.04, 1.7 |
| 111 |
| -0.13, 1.4 |
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| 137 |
| 0.20, 1.4 |
| 96 | (0.46) | 0.11, 1.9 |
| 92 |
| -0.19, 1.4 |
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| 95% CI |
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| 95% CI |
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| 95% CI |
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| 136 |
| -1.4, 1.5 | 0.92 | 86 |
| -2.2, 0.55 | 0.24 | 89 |
| -1.1, 2.9 | 0.38 |
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| 135 |
| -1.0, 1.7 | 0.61 | 85 |
| -1.8, 0.73 | 0.40 | 88 |
| -0.78, 3.1 | 0.24 |
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| 133 |
| -0.99, 1.7 | 0.59 | 84 |
| -1.8, 0.75 | 0.41 | 87 |
| -0.78, 3.2 | 0.23 |
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| 125 |
| -0.94, 1.9 | 0.50 | 79 |
| -1.8, 0.86 | 0.48 | 83 |
| -0.73, 3.4 | 0.20 |
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| 101 |
| -1.1, 2.1 | 0.56 | 64 |
| -2.3, 0.40 | 0.17 | 66 |
| -0.54, 4.3 | 0.13 |
Regression with robust SE, adjusted for baseline OASMa. Beta = regression coefficient; CI = confidence interval; OASMa = Overt-Aggression-Scale-Modified–Aggression-Subscale; SE = standard error. (ii) Simvastatin, in age >55, shows a significant treatment-by-baseline aggression interaction, P = 0.043. Reduction trend for pravastatin, and increase trend for simvastatin is similar to effects observed in men under age 40 with baseline aggression. Of note, estimated absolute effect magnitudes among those with baseline aggression (reduced aggression for pravastatin and increased aggression for simvastatin), though nonsignificant, are comparable to effect magnitudes that were significant in those without baseline aggression; however, Ns are smaller, and SEs for aggression changes are materially higher.