Conference Coverage

VIDEO: HOPE-3 trial expands scope of primary cardiovascular prevention


 

AT ACC 16

References

CHICAGO – The HOPE-3 trial has brought the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease front-and-center as a hot topic of discussion at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology.

The large, randomized trial provides new evidence of a significant reduction in cardiovascular events in an intermediate-risk population that hasn’t previously been the focus of risk reduction via pharmacotherapy.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

The double-blind study randomized nearly 13,000 intermediate-risk men and women with no baseline cardiovascular disease to lipid-lowering with rosuvastatin (Crestor) at 10 mg/day or placebo, dual-antihypertensive therapy with candesartan plus chlorothiazide or placebo regardless of baseline blood pressure, or all three drugs or placebo. After a median of 5.6 years, the combined-therapy group had a 29% reduction in the composite of cardiovascular death or nonfatal MI or stroke compared with placebo-treated controls. Impressively, the benefit was similar regardless of baseline LDL-cholesterol level; however, only subjects with hypertension benefited from the dual-antihypertensive therapy.

In this interview, Dr. B. Hadley Wilson of the Sanger Clinic in Charlotte, N.C., explains why he considers HOPE-3 to be a giant step forward in preventive cardiolo

bjancin@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Incretin-based diabetes drugs don’t raise heart failure risk
MDedge Internal Medicine
Heart attack patients getting younger, fatter, and less healthy
MDedge Internal Medicine
Brain imaging suggests link between stress and cardiovascular events
MDedge Internal Medicine
Arterial calcium findings on mammograms can predict heart disease risk
MDedge Internal Medicine
Guideline update shortens minimum DAPT duration in CAD
MDedge Internal Medicine
Endovascular surges over surgery for patients hospitalized for CLI
MDedge Internal Medicine
Breast cancer treatment linked to mild systolic dysfunction
MDedge Internal Medicine
Women with suspected CAD classified as lower risk than men
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA: CT scans safe for patients with electronic medical devices
MDedge Internal Medicine
Prepsychosis links with elevated metabolic syndrome
MDedge Internal Medicine