When
data from the
JUPITER study was released at the
American Heart Association (AHA)
Scientific Sessions, a bang of
excitement was heard round the world
with headlines that blazed “Heart
Attack Risk Lowered More that 50% By
Taking Crestor,”
a statin drug made by AstraZenica.
Reported
widely by the New York Times,
the Associated Press, the
Washington Post,
CNN, and Time,
among others is attributable to the
marketing strategy of Crestor’s
manufacturer, AstraZenca rather than any
significance in the findings.
The JUPITER Study
Before anyone rushes to add
statin drugs to lower
the risk of heart attacks when their
heart shows no sign of disease, let’s
take a close look at the findings for
they reveal a more important discovery,
one I saw in 5,000 heart surgery
patients, inflammation, the real cause
of heart disease.
The
study intended to assess whether
prescribing statin therapy to apparently
healthy individuals with normal LDL
cholesterols but elevated C-reactive
protein levels (CRP 2.0 mg/L) was
advisable. C-reactive protein
is a marker that determines the
level of inflammation in the
body.
1.9 Years, 17,802 Men And Women
To
qualify for the study patients had to be
apparently healthy, have normal
cholesterol but with an elevated CRP.
Over 1.9 years, 17,802 men over 60 and
women over 50 were
treated with one-half receiving 20 mg.
of Crestor daily and the other half
receiving a placebo. AstraZenica, the
manufacturer of Crestor, funded the
study when Pfizer declined to do so.
As many
noted after release of the findings,
even though patients were classified as
healthy, many had a number of
cardiovascular risk factors such as
overweight with the median body-mass
index (BMI) of 28.3 kg/m2. It
would be unfair to say these patients
had no other risk factors.
Very
few individuals have ideal risk factors,
including LDL-cholesterol levels. Many
have suggested ideal LDL-cholesterol
levels, based on hunter-gatherer
societies and non-human primates are
likely in the range of 50 to 60 mg/dL.
The
benefit to treatment of patients as well
as any changes to public-health policy
depends on the absolute benefit and not
the relative risk reduction. This is
very important in assessing the
significance of the results. The risk of
having a heart attack in the placebo
group was 1.8%. The risk in the group
treated with Crestor was .09% for a real
reduction of .9% also called the
absolute risk deduction.
Conclusion
While
this is a 50% reduction in relative
risk, the actual real difference is less
than 1%. This does not mean 50% reduced
the risk of heart disease as many
headlines stated. [emphasis added]
Despite
the marketing madness that went on
across the internet, media, radio and
news stations attesting to the
magnificence of the findings, only one
person out of 120 patients treated over
1.9 years avoided a heart attack. I
want to repeat that for emphasis-only
one person out of 120 avoided a heart
attack.
If it
takes treating 120 people with a drug to
prevent one heart attack, there is
nothing in this study to generate this
much excitement or use statin therapy
preventatively unless you are the drug
company anticipating astronomical sales.
New England Journal Of Medicine
Dr. Mark Hlatky reporting in the New
England Journal of Medicine, wrote, “The
relative risk reductions achieved with
the use of statin therapy in JUPITER
were clearly significant. How the
absolute difference in risk are more
clinically important than relative
reductions in risk in deciding whether
to recommend drug therapy since the
absolute benefits of treatment must be
large enough to justify the associated
risks and costs.
The
proportion of participants with hard
cardiac events in JUPITER was reduced
from 1.8% (157 of 8,901 subjects) in the
placebo group to .09% (83 of 8,901
subjects) in the rosuvastatin group;
thus, 120 participants were
treated for 1.9 years to prevent
one event.” [emphasis
added]
The Exorbitant Cost
The
cost for treating 120 people with
Crestor is $3.45 a day or $266,616.00
for 1.9 years-an exorbitant amount of
money to prevent one event.
In
addition to this cost, there would be
the cost of 2,520 doctor’s visits with
2,520 cholesterol tests.
What JUPITER revealed is only one person
avoided a heart attack and there were
significant side effects in the increase
in people who developed diabetes and
other complications.
The
patients all began with normal
cholesterol and markers for
inflammation. The finding in the study
that has far more significance is the
reduction shown in inflammation.
Cholesterol in the patients began within
normal range so reducing it further is
not the reason there was a small
reduction in risk;
rather, the reduction in inflammation
was accountable for the small difference
in heart attack rates.
I am
all in favor of prevention and do not
want anyone to have a heart attack but
once again, medicine, under
the influence of drug companies,
takes the wrong and most expensive
approach. AstraZenica stock is up
45% since the news and they expect to
double the sales of Crestor from 3
billion to 6 billion dollars annually in
the next few years-great news if you
hold the stock, not so great for really
preventing heart disease or controlling
costs of health care.
Let’s Be Truthful
If
Astra were honest, they would ask the
FDA for permission to market Crestor as
an anti-inflammatory for the blood
vessels-a much better use of statin
drugs but expensive. Although this study
showed only a small benefit, it does
re-confirm that inflammation is
the cause of heart disease. The
cholesterol theory, while exceedingly
false, is the dogma of the day and it is
time for truth and fact in
medicine.
There
are alternatives to statin therapy to
reduce inflammation and in turn, prevent
and cure heart disease; alternatives
that do not involve drug therapy and yet
have a higher absolute reduction in
cardiac deaths. The medical community
fails to acknowledge the simple
alternatives that are much more
effective than drugs, less remunerative
of course, but with astounding
reductions in cardiac deaths through
treating inflammation.
Alternatives
The
DART trial showed a 62% reduction in
cardiac deaths by taking fish oil. Fish
oil has proven repeatedly to reduce CRP
and other signs of inflammation.
Another trial, The
Physicians Healthy Study showed a
90% reduction in sudden cardiac death
with fish oil; once again, not risk but
actual reduction. Another, the
GISSI trial, showed an
absolute reduction in deaths by taking
fish oil and a 47% reduction in sudden
cardiac deaths. These are not risk
numbers but real reductions.
The
most significant and overlooked results
of the JUPITER study that confirms the
findings in DART, GISSI and The
Physicians Health Study is that
the reduction in inflammation was
responsible for decreasing the risk of
heart disease. The patients’ all had
normal cholesterol when the study began;
reduction in cholesterol was not
responsible for the small decrease in
risk.
As a
physician who performed 5,000 heart
surgeries and saw inflammation in the
arteries of every patient, it is
maddening when medicine ignores simple
things such as fish oil that are much
more effective than drugs. In terms of
cost, the simple alternatives that are
highly effective range from $50 to $100
per month.
There
is no comparison to health, or to the
wallet, in terms of these alternatives
and the exorbitant cost of statin
therapy for cholesterol when cholesterol
is not the cause of heart disease.
However, it is noteworthy there is a
benefit to statin therapy in that it has
some impact upon inflammation but at a
much higher cost than fish oil.
Treat
inflammation and the absolute risk of
heart disease not only decreases, heart
disease is preventable and curable.
You
can fight the fires of inflammation
through simple changes in the foods you
eat with additional of essential
supplements.
Dr.
Dwight Lundell
Lois Smithers