Diabetes Mellitus Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Trial of the Long-term Clinical Effects of Raising HDL Cholesterol With Extended Release Niacin/Laropiprant
The primary aim is to assess the effects of raising HDL cholesterol (the good type) with extended release niacin/laropiprant 2g (previously known as MK−0524A) versus matching placebo on the risk of heart attack or coronary death, stroke, or the need for arterial bypass procedures (revascularisation) in people with a history of circulatory problems. The secondary aim is to assess the effects of extended release niacin/laropiprant 2g daily on heart attack, coronary death, stroke, and revascularisation separately and to assess the effects on mortality both overall and in various categories of causes of death, and of the effects on major cardiovascular events in people with a history of different diseases at the beginning of the study.
Cardiovascular disease is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in the United
Kingdom (UK), as well as in the developed and the developing world. Finding new and safe
treatments to reduce the burden of heart disease and strokes is therefore an important
contribution to public health and in the wider public interest. HPS2-THRIVE aims to find out
whether by combining niacin (a drug that has been available for 50 years) with a new drug
laropiprant(which reduces the side-effects of niacin) is beneficial. All participants in
HPS2-THRIVE will have established cardiovascular disease and therefore be at very high risk
of recurrent vascular events (myocardial infarction, stroke or the need for arterial
revascularisation). Two of the most important risk factors for recurrent events in such
patients are the blood levels of LDL cholesterol with a positive association, and HDL
cholesterol levels with a negative association.
HDL cholesterol has long been known to have a strong inverse correlation with coronary heart
disease (CHD) risk. But, randomized trial evidence for beneficial effects from raising HDL
cholesterol is limited. One of the most effective HDL-raising agents is niacin but the
tolerability of niacin has been severely limited by flushing and cutaneous side-effects,
which appear to be mediated largely by prostaglandin D. Laropiprant is a selective
prostaglandin D receptor antagonist that substantially reduces the frequency and intensity
of niacin-induced flushing. Daily oral doses of extended release (ER) niacin plus
Laropiprant 2g(formerly MK-0524A) have been well tolerated in early studies and increase HDL
cholesterol by 20-25%. The trial will assess whether this increase in HDL cholesterol
translates into clinical benefit as is expected from the observational evidence. In
addition, all participants will also be provided with effective LDL-lowering therapy, as
either simvastatin 40mg daily alone or with ezetimibe 10mg daily in a combination tablet.
The complementary effects on the HDL (good) and LDL (bad) cholesterol produced by extended
release niacin/laropiprant 2 g daily and simvastatin 40 mg with or without ezetimibe 10 mg
should provide an excellent treatment option for patients with vascular disease. However, no
trials so far have demonstrated clearly that raising HDL cholesterol produces the expected
reduction in cardiovascular risk. If HPS2-THRIVE is able to demonstrate reliably that
raising HDL cholesterol reduces the risk of further cardiovascular events then this will be
relevant to hundreds of millions of people worldwide.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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