Recent evidence on the use of statin therapy indicates the potential for ultra-low levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL-C) to provide greater protection from recurrent coronary heart disease (CHD) events. Thus, in August 2005, the guidelines for the treatment of lipid disorders (NCEP ATPIII) were revised to indicate that an LDL-C treatment goal of 70 mg/dL (revised from 100 mg/dL) was optional for patients with known CHD. In these same guidelines, low levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL-C) are also suggested but not specifically proscribed as a target of therapy. Recently the ARBITER 2 trial has provided the first evidence of the potential of raising HDL-C with extended release niacin when added to statin monotherapy. However, whether this approach would be superior to a strategy in which lower concentrations of LDL-C are targeted is unknown. The purpose of ARBITER 6 - HALTS is to compare HDL and LDL-focused strategies of lipid treatments for their effects of atherosclerosis. This study is a prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded endpoint trial comparing treatment strategies of either HDL-raising therapies or LDL reduction for dyslipidemia on carotid atherosclerosis. Subjects with known atherosclerotic coronary or vascular disease or otherwise at high cardiovascular risk through the presence of a coronary risk equivalent who are currently being treated with a statin will be eligible. Subjects will be randomly assigned in an allocation-concealed fashion to open label treatment with either Ezetimibe 10 mg/d for additional LDL-lowering OR Extended-release niacin (1 gm/d, titrated to max tolerable dose up to 2 gm/d) for HDL improvement. The effects of these 2 different strategies of intensified lipid management on atherosclerosis will be assessed by the change in the carotid intima-media thickness, a validated surrogate endpoint. The data will help guide clinicians on the potential benefits of these lipid treatment strategies.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
400
Extended release niacin will be started at 1000mg and titrated to 2000mg once a day
Ezetimibe 10mg once daily
Walter Reed Army Medical Center
Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
Washington Adventist Hospital
Takoma Park, Maryland, United States
The primary endpoint is the change in carotid intima-media thickness between groups after 14 months
Time frame: 14 months
The change in lipid values and lipid subfractions
Time frame: 14 months
A composite endpoint consisting of all major adverse cardiovascular events (coronary heart disease death, myocardial infarction, myocardial revascularization, admission to the hospital for an acute coronary syndrome)
Time frame: 14 months
Drug discontinuation due to adverse effects
Time frame: 14 months
Quality of life measured with the EQ-5D questionnaire- a generic questionnaire for describing and valuing subjects' health-related quality of life that has been studied in cardiovascular subjects
Time frame: 14 months
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