Study: Crestor Reversed Heart Disease
Research Funded By Drug's Maker Found 7 To 9 Percent Drop In Artery Plaque
-
Play CBS Video Video Turning Heart Disease Around Doctors are reporting that heavy doses of a leading drug used to lower cholesterol can actually reverse heart disease. Elizabeth Kaledin has more.
-
Video Preventing Strokes Baseball Hall of Famer Kirby Puckett died after suffering a massive stroke. He was 45 years old. Dr. Emily Senay discusses the dangers of a stroke and how to avoid it with Harry Smith.
-
(AP / CBS)
-
Interactive Heart Disease Learn more about different types of heart disease, explore different treatments and assess your own risk.
-
Quiz Medical Exam Give your brain a checkup with these health quizzes.
Clots in arteries are the main cause of heart attacks. Big ones are treated with angioplasty to flatten them or surgery to bypass them, but doctors have long sought a less drastic solution that also treats small buildups that can slowly worsen until they squeeze a vessel shut.
Statins such as Lipitor, Zocor and Pravachol have become the world's top-selling drugs by dramatically lowering LDL or "bad cholesterol," a culprit in clot formation.
In the study, Crestor not only dropped average LDL levels from 130 milligrams per deciliter of blood at the start to around 60, but also raised HDL or "good cholesterol" from 43 to 49.
Doctors think this dual effect may be what caused blockages to shrink, as documented by ultrasound measurements before and two years after treatment.
The volume of each patient's main blockage decreased a modest 1 percent. The amount of buildup in the most clogged artery decreased 9 percent, and in the entire length of the vessel, 7 percent, on average.
"The results are very, very exciting and break new ground," said Dr. David Williams of Rhode Island Cardiology Center, who had no role in the study.
It would have been better if it had tested Crestor against a lower dose of another statin, Dr. Roger Blumenthal of Johns Hopkins University wrote in an editorial in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The journal will publish the study in its April 5 issue.
The maximum dose for Crestor is 40 milligrams a day; it is 80 milligrams for the other, less powerful statins. Insurers already are restricting use of specific brands, something likely to escalate in the next few months as Pravachol and Zocor lose patent protection and cheaper generics become available.
The study also renews debate about how low LDL should go. Federal guidelines recommend aiming for 70 in people at high risk of heart disease, but Nissen said the benefits seen when it is pushed to 60 suggest that "as low as we can go might make more sense."
"The body needs about 40 LDL, so we're getting pretty close to what the body needs for general repair," said Dr. Christopher O'Connor, a Duke University cardiologist who had no role in the research.
Also at the conference:
However, more people whose hearts were patched had a significant reduction in their number of headaches - a result that gives hope to the device's maker, Boston-based NMT Medical Inc., which has commissioned a larger study of it in the United States.
If further studies prove the stent safe and successful, it could become the first one usable in children, who can't use current metal and drug-coated plastic stents because the devices don't grow as they do.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Grammy winner Shakira on her music career, philanthropy and being sexy.




