Published: March 14, 2010
ACCORD Lipid Study Brings new Hope to People With Type 2 Diabetes and Atherogenic Dyslipidemia Says International Academic Foundation
ATLANTA, Georgia , March 14, 2010 /PRNewswire/ -- Cardiovascular risk can
be reduced by an additional 31 percent in type 2 diabetes patients with
atherogenic dyslipidemia, the common combination of elevated triglycerides
(TG, 204 mg/dL or 2.3 mmol/L or higher) and low levels of high-density
lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C, 34 mg/dL or 0.88 mmol/L or lower). This is
achieved by adding fenofibrate to simvastatin. Only 20 of these patients need
to be treated for 5 years to prevent one cardiovascular event.
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In the Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes (ACCORD) Lipid
trial, published on-line in the New England Journal of Medicine,(1) the group
with atherogenic dyslipidemia had 70 percent more cardiovascular events
(cardiovascular death, heart attacks and strokes) than patients without. In
fact, the risk associated with atherogenic dyslipidemia was comparable to
that in people with previous cardiovascular disease (17.3 percent versus 18.1
percent).
Professor Jean-Charles Fruchart, President of the Residual Risk Reduction
Initiative (R3i), an independent Swiss academic foundation, said: 'For the
last two years, the R3i has focused on the hypothesis that residual
cardiovascular risk in statin-treated patients is associated with atherogenic
dyslipidemia.(2,3) ACCORD Lipid confirms both the hypothesis and the value of
adding fenofibrate to a statin to reduce this high residual cardiovascular
risk. This is consistent with current guidelines from the American Diabetes
Association(4) and the National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment
Panel III.(5)'
The benefit of fenofibrate was only seen in the pre-specified group of
diabetic patients with atherogenic dyslipidemia and not in the total study
population. 'While patients with atherogenic dyslipidemia only represented 17
percent of the ACCORD Lipid population, in clinical practice the size of the
problem is significantly greater. We are now quantifying this in the
R3i-funded REsiduAl risk Lipids and Standard Therapies (REALIST) study which
is being conducted at Harvard Medical School and over 20 well-known academic
centers worldwide,' said Professor Frank Sacks of Harvard Medical School,
Boston,USA and Vice-President of the R3i.
In ACCORD Lipid, fenofibrate also reduced micro- and macro-albuminuria,
markers of diabetic renal disease. This is consistent with results from
earlier clinical trials.(6,7) 'Diabetic nephropathy is a major management
issue. Therefore it is important knowledge that fenofibrate provides benefit
to these patients,' said Professor Michel Hermans of Cliniques Universitaires
Saint-Luc,Brussels, Belgium and General Secretary of the R3i.
The study also confirmed that adding fenofibrate to simvastatin did not
result in any excess risk of myopathy (muscle problems), venous thrombosis or
pancreatitis. In fact, there were fewer all-cause and cardiovascular deaths
in fenofibrate-treated patients than in patients treated with simvastatin
alone.
R3i leads new research into atherogenic dyslipidemia in type 2 diabetes
Atherogenic dyslipidemia is common and the prevalence is markedly
increasing as a result of the global epidemic of type 2 diabetes, obesity and
metabolic syndrome.(8) So, in the U.S. about half of the high- risk patients
beginning statin therapy may require additional treatment to lower their
triglycerides and/or to raise their HDL-C.(9)
The R3i is responding to this critically important clinical problem.
'Given the magnitude of the global epidemic of type 2 diabetes - especially
in developing regions - targeting atherogenic dyslipidemia is crucial. As the
only independent global research foundation focusing on this issue, the R3i
is urgently developing recommendations for evidence-based strategies to
reduce residual vascular risk. Currently, we are conducting the first
world-wide epidemiological study, REALIST, to establish the prevalence of
atherogenic dyslipidemia and consequent residual risk of cardiovascular
events. Now, as a result of ACCORD Lipid, we will also initiate a
meta-analysis of the atherogenic dyslipidemic subgroups of patients (high TG
and/or low HDL-C) in previous fibrate studies,' said Professor Fruchart.
Notes to Editors
About ACCORD
The ACCORD study was sponsored by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute (NHLBI), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the
U.S, and was conducted across the U.S. andCanada. The key question addressed
in the ACCORD Lipid treatment arm was whether the combination of fenofibrate
plus simvastatin, i.e. targeting elevated TG and low HDL-C in addition to
LDL-C, was more effective in reducing cardiovascular events than statin
therapy alone in a cohort of 5,518 high-risk patients with controlled type 2
diabetes mellitus at target for LDL-C. Fenofibrate was chosen because
subgroup analyses from previous trials had shown added benefits in patients
with type 2 diabetes, or in those with abdominal obesity characteristic of
the metabolic syndrome.(10-14) No other clinical trial had previously tested
this strategy.
However, the population treated was broader than that recommended by
current guidelines for fenofibrate. More than 80 percent of patients did not
have sufficiently elevated TG and low HDL-C warranting treatment according to
current clinical practice.
ACCORD Lipid established that extending fenofibrate treatment to this
broader population did not significantly benefit any of the primary or
secondary cardiovascular outcomes in the total study population. However, the
study did show a substantial reduction in cardiovascular events with
fenofibrate-simvastatin treatment in patients with atherogenic dyslipidemia,
with event rates decreasing from 17.3 percent in the simvastatin monotherapy
group to 12.4 percent with combination treatment over 4.7 years. This result
supports current guidelines and common clinical practice.
More information on the R3i is available from:
The R3i website: http://www.r3i.org
References
1. The ACCORD Study Group. Effects of combination lipid therapy in type 2
diabetes mellitus. N Eng JMed 2010. DOI:10.1056/NEJMoa1001282.
2. Fruchart JC, Sacks FM, Hermans MP et al. The Residual Risk Reduction
Initiative: a call to action to reduce residual vascular risk in
dyslipidaemic patients. Diab Vasc Dis Res 2008;5:319-35.
3. Fruchart JC, Sacks FM, Hermans MP et al. The Residual Risk Reduction
Initiative: a call to action to reduce residual vascular risk in dyslipidemic
patients. Am J Cardiol 2008;102(10 Suppl):1K-34K.
4. American Diabetes Association. Standards of medical care in
diabetes-2008. Diabetes Care 2008; 31(suppl 1): S12-S54. [Updated 2009:
Executive Summary: Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes-2009. Diabetes Care
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5. National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) Expert Panel on
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treatment on cardiovascular disease risk in 9795 people with type 2 diabetes
and various components of the metabolic syndrome: the FIELD study. Diabetes
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11. Manninen V, Tenkanen L, Koskinen P et al. Joint effects of serum
triglyceride and LDL cholesterol and HDL cholesterol concentrations on
coronary heart disease risk in the Helsinki Heart Study. Implications for
treatment. Circulation 1992;85:37-45.
12. Rubins HB, Robins SJ, Collins D et al. Diabetes, plasma insulin, and
cardiovascular disease. Subgroup analysis from the Department of Veterans
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2002;162:2597-2604.
13. Tenkanen L, Mantarri M, Manninen V. Some coronary risk factors
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14. Tenenbaum A, Motro M, Fisman EZ, Tanne D, Boyko V, Behar S.
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SOURCE Residual Risk Reduction initiative (R3i)
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