Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
To assess whether hormonal replacement therapy and/or antioxidant treatment would stabilize or inhibit progression, and induce regression of coronary plaques. The mechanisms by which these treatments modified atherosclerosis in women were also explored.
BACKGROUND:
Coronary artery disease is the leading cause of death in the United States, accounting for
over 500,000 deaths each year. Although the onset of coronary artery disease is delayed in
women, it is the single most important cause of death in women over the entire life span.
Indeed, because more women than men survive to old age, mortality due to coronary artery
disease for all ages combined is as great in women as in men. Furthermore, once they present
with clinical evidence of coronary artery disease, women have a prognosis as poor as, or
even worse, than that for men. In part, this may be due to late recognition of coronary
artery disease in women, less intensive treatment of women, or a more adverse risk profile
in women who develop coronary artery disease. The report of a recent Working Group on
Angiographic Trials of Atherosclerosis Prevention notes that, compared to males, females who
develop coronary artery disease, have various different characteristics which may affect the
vascular response to lipid-altering interventions. These differences led the report to
question whether the mechanisms and clinical benefits of lipid-altering agents may be
different in men and women. It further noted that angiographic trials conducted to date have
been based primarily upon the cholesterol-lowering treatments of diet or drugs and suggested
that other approaches based upon the lipid hypothesis could profitably be tested and should
be given the highest priority at this time; specifically recommended were trials of hormone
replacement and antioxidant therapy in women.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
Subjects were randomized into a 2 x 2 factorial trial of hormone replacement therapy and
antioxidant therapy. Women were randomized into four treatment groups: both active hormone
replacement and antioxidant; active hormone replacement therapy and antioxidant placebo;
active antioxidant therapy and hormone replacement placebo; double placebo plus usual care.
Hormone replacement therapy consisted of estrogen plus a progestin (PremPro) for all
gynecologically intact women, and unopposed estrogen (Premarin) for women with
hysterectomies. Antioxidants consisted of a combination of vitamin E and vitamin C.
Angiographic change was a primary endpoint of this trial. The study was double-blind to the
extent permitted by the interventions; however, it was fully-blinded with respect to outcome
variables. Recruitment ended in August 1999. The mean duration of follow-up was
approximately three years.
The NHLBI awarded R01HL68397 in April 2001 as an ancillary study to WAVE. The study entitled
"Modifying Oxidative Damage in WAVE" has its on site on this database.
The study completion date listed in this record was obtained from the "End Date" entered in
the Protocol Registration and Results System (PRS) record.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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