Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
To evaluate, in asymptomatic and symptomatic participants with peripheral arterial disease, the feasibility of recruitment and adherence, efficacy and safety of HDL-C raising along with effective control of LDL-C levels, antioxidant therapy, antithrombotic therapy, and their combinations.
BACKGROUND:
Multiple mechanisms are involved in the deposition of LDL-C into the arterial wall, and the
prevention of such deposition as well as the removal of the LDL-particles. Further, there
remain questions regarding what causes an existing plaque that has been stable for a long
period of time to become occlusive or ulcerating and what may prevent it from doing so.
Prevention and treatment are almost certain to become multifaceted and more complex when
using several complementary interventions or preventive measures concomitantly.
Multifactorial prevention and treatment may be particularly useful in people with peripheral
arterial disease. PAD as manifested by intermittent claudication affects about 0.5 to 1.0
percent of individuals above age 35, with a twofold predominance in men. There is a
strikingly increased incidence with age in both sexes, particularly in those above age 50.
Mortality in patients with intermittent claudication has been shown to be six times higher
than in other people of similar age and gender. The excess in mortality is primarily due to
a ninefold increase in cardiovascular disease (CVD) deaths. Those who have asymptomatic but
measurable PAD (two to two-and-a-half times as many as have intermittent claudication), have
relative risks of about 3 and 4 for total and CVD mortality, respectively. Therefore,
interventions that prevent the development or progression of atherosclerotic disease or
reduce arterial thrombosis should reduce mortality and morbidity due to myocardial
infarction and stroke while favorably affecting the morbidity directly associated with PAD.
The National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) has included peripheral vascular disease
(PVD) in its guidelines as a risk factor in the Classification and Decision for Treatment
Algorithm. This means that patients who have PVD and elevated LDL-C and one other risk
factor such as male gender, family history, cigarette smoking, or hypertension, should have
appropriate dietary intervention followed by drug therapy as needed. Even with the
guidelines in place since the end of 1987, a survey of PVD patients referred to a major
medical center clinic found that very few patients were on lipid lowering therapy, either
diet or drug. The reason for the primary care community not modifying lipids in these high
risk patients may be related to lack of studies demonstrating benefit of lipid modification
in those who have PVD. It is anticipated that many patients with PAD will require treatment
for elevated LDL-C. It is not as clear whether interventions aimed at raising HDL-C will
result in a slowing of progression of atherosclerosis in this population.
Platelets have been shown to have a key role in the development of occlusive atherosclerosis
and thrombosis related to coronary heart disease. Inhibition of platelet function has been
postulated to slow progression of atherosclerosis; specifically, aspirin has been
demonstrated to reduce lipoprotein deposition in the arterial wall of nonhuman primates.
This deposition is even further reduced by the addition of a lipid lowering regimen to the
antiplatelet regimen. It remains unclear whether mini-dose, less intense anticoagulation is
the most appropriate antithrombotic therapy in people with PAD who are also receiving lipid
modifying agents.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
Patients were randomized to a control arm or to one of three treatment arms, including a
lipid modification arm, an antioxidant arm, and an antithrombotic arm. Patients in the lipid
modification arm were randomized to placebo or treated with nicotinic acid to increase HDL
while lowering LDL levels equally with the hydroxymethylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase
inhibitor pravastatin as needed in the intervention and control groups. Patients in the
antioxidant arm were assigned to daily doses of 24 mg. of beta-carotene, 800 IU of vitamin
E, and 1.0 g of vitamin C or to placebo. Patients in the antithrombotic arm received 2
mg/day of active or placebo warfarin taken daily until the fifth follow-up visit. Patients
were followed every six weeks after entry for one year of follow-up. The primary endpoint of
the study was the efficacy and safety of HDL-C raising along with effective control of LDL-C
levels, antioxidant therapy, antithrombotic therapy, and their combinations. The secondary
endpoints were to determine the efficacy of the HDL-C raising arm to achieve an increase in
HDL-C in the treatment group while also obtaining equivalent reductions in LDL-C in the
treatment and control groups, to assess the dose-response of niacin on HDL-C raising, to
determine if the combination of low-dose warfarin plus aspirin versus aspirin alone had the
expected impact on the hemostatic system, to determine if combination antioxidant therapy
(vitamins E and C and beta carotene) led to changes in biomarkers for antioxidants, and to
determine the interaction of the lipid altering strategy with antioxidants for effects on
biomarkers for antioxidants. Screening began August 1, 1993, randomization began December 1,
1993 and ended December 31, 1994 with a total of 468 patients enrolled. Support for the
trial ended in September 1995. Data analysis continues through March 31, 1999 under contract
N01HC35124.
The study completion date listed in this record was obtained from the "Completed Date"
entered in the Query View Report System (QVR).
;
Allocation: Randomized, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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