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(Circulation. 1996;93:1826-1835.)
© 1996 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
From the Departments of Internal Medicine (A.A.K., A.F.H.S.) and Cardiology (W.R.M.A., T.v.d.W., G.J.H.U.), University Hospital Nijmegen, and the Departments of Diagnostic Radiology (J.H.C.R.) and Cardiology (A.V.G.B.) (Heart Core Laboratory), University Hospital Leiden, the Netherlands.
Correspondence to A.F.H. Stalenhoef, MD, Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital Nijmegen, PO Box 9101, 6500 HB Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Background Intensive lipid lowering may retard the progression of coronary atherosclerosis. LDL-apheresis has the potential to decrease LDL cholesterol to very low levels. To assess the effect of more aggressive lipid lowering with LDL-apheresis, we set up a randomized study in men with hypercholesterolemia and severe coronary atherosclerosis.
Methods and Results For 2 years, 42 men were treated with either biweekly LDL-apheresis plus medication or medication alone. In both groups a dose of simvastatin of 40 mg per day was administered. Baseline (mean±SD) LDL cholesterol was 7.8±1.9 mmol·L-1 and 7.9±2.3 mmol·L-1 in the apheresis and medication groups, respectively. The mean reduction in LDL cholesterol was 63% (to 3.0 mmol·L-1) and 47% (to 4.1 mmol·L-1), respectively. Primary quantitative coronary angiographic end points were changes in average mean segment diameter and minimal obstruction diameter. No differences between the apheresis and medication groups were found in mean segment diameter (-0.01±0.16 mm versus 0.03±0.16 mm, respectively) or in minimal obstruction diameter (-0.01±0.13 mm versus 0.01±0.11 mm, respectively), expressed as means per patient. On the basis of coronary segment, mean percent stenosis of all lesions showed a tendency to decrease; only in the apheresis group more minor lesions disappeared in comparison to the medication group. On bicycle exercise tests, the time to 0.1 mV ST-segment depression increased significantly by 39% and the maximum level of ST depression decreased significantly by 0.07 mV in the apheresis group versus no changes in the medication group.
Conclusions Two years of lipid lowering both with medication alone or LDL-apheresis with medication showed angiographic arrest of the progression of coronary artery disease. However, more aggressive treatment induced functional improvement, which may precede anatomic changes.
Key Words: angiography atherosclerosis coronary disease apheresis lipids lipoproteins
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