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September 22nd, 2010

PARTNER Results Boost Transcatheter Aortic-Valve Implantation

Patients with aortic stenosis who are not candidates for aortic valve replacement surgery can benefit from transcatheter aortic-valve implantation (TAVI), according to results of the PARTNER (Placement of AoRTic TraNscathetER Valves) trial published in the New England Journal of Medicine. (The trial will also be presented at the TCT conference on Thursday.) Martin Leon and colleagues randomized 358 patients with aortic stenosis who were judged ineligible for aortic replacement by a surgeon to receive TAVI or standard therapy.

At 1 year, the mortality rate (the primary endpoint) was 30.7% in the TAVI group versus 50.7% in the control group, a highly significant difference (HR, 0.55; CI, 0.40-0.74; p<0.001). The coprimary endpoint, a composite of death from any cause or repeat hospitalization, occurred in 42.5% of the TAVI group versus 71.6% of the control group (HR, 0.46; CI, 0.35-0.59; p<0.001). Stroke or TIA, however, occurred in 10.6% of the TAVI group versus 4.5% of controls (p=0.04). Major vascular complications occurred in 16.8% of the TAVI group versus 2.2% of controls.

As expected, TAVI was associated with more early hazards: At 30 days there were more deaths and strokes in the TAVI group, although these differences did not reach statistical significance. Increases in bleeding and vascular complications, however, were highly significant both at 30 days and at 1year. Balloon aortic valvuloplasty was performed in nearly two-thirds of patients in the control group in the first 30 days and in an additional 20% of controls after 30 days.

The authors conclude:

On the basis of a rate of death from any cause at 1 year that was 20 percentage points lower with TAVI than with standard therapy, balloon-expandable TAVI should be the new standard of care for patients with aortic stenosis who are not suitable candidates for surgery (like the patients enrolled in this study). These results cannot be extrapolated to other patients with aortic stenosis.

This first installment of the PARTNER trial is called Cohort B. The second installment, Cohort A, which is comparing TAVI to surgical valve replacement in high-risk patients, is expected to report its findings next year.

September 21st, 2010

See Everything

John Mandrola is a cardiac electrophysiologist and blogger on matters medical and general. Here is a recent post from his blog Dr John M.

Do you see anything wrong with this picture?

(Hint: see the right column)

I guess the European electrophysiologists couldn’t wait for us in North America.  They have published their own 54,000 word Euro-specific guidance on AF management. It is certainly true that atrial fibrillation management guidelines needed an update; the last comprehensive revision was in 2006.  Much has changed in AF therapy, including the expanded role of catheter ablation and the soon-to-be warfarin substitutes. There are some neat new topics in this revision: a novel symptom score for AF, refinement of the CHADS2 scale for predicting stroke risk (in anticipation of new anticoagulants), and an expanded role of catheter ablation. All of these are welcome, fairly uncontroversial additions. The more contentious issue is the role of “newer anti-arrhythmic agents.”

Well, that could only mean one thing . . . yes, you guessed  . . . dronedarone.

From Dr J Camm (a prominent British professor and a paid consultant for Sanofi), as quoted in a Heartwire article, we hear:

For rhythm control, the guidelines incorporate the new antiarrhythmic drug dronedarone, which was approved by the European Medicines Agency at the end of last year, into the recommendations. “We’re saying, from a benefit/risk point of view, that dronedarone is widely applicable.”

“Widely applicable,” he says? Of dronedarone?  Hmm.

There are ample dronedarone data in the literature. As treatment forAF, it is touted for its safety and its reduction of hospitalizations.  But not all the findings are so flattering.  Especially, these less-than-striking data on its efficacy for suppressing AF. The selective emphasis in the reporting of dronedarone trials is chronicled here, on Cardiobrief.

The catch with dronedarone is that patients with symptomatic AF look to us to help relieve their symptoms. Favorable statistics are one thing — dronedarone researchers have plenty of data to publish articles. However, in the real world, where AF patients consider their treatment successful when their AF stops, lack of AF-suppression is a challenging hurdle to overcome. But they will try, with paid professors and banner ads on purportedly information-only websites.

Dronedarone’s lack of efficacy will sort itself out in time. It will find its limited role. But until then, the banner ads and proclamations from the universities will likely continue.

I was taught in medical school to look around on entering a patient’s room, to take in everything — the sights and smells, the family, the monitors, and even the patient’s reading material.  Much can be learned from the background, the sidelines.  This is also good advice when reading information on the internet.  Take in everything, including a look at what’s on the right of the page to see who is paying to promulgate the information.

Eyes open.

September 21st, 2010

What it Really Means to be a “Best Doc”

Guest blogger “Dr. Grumpy” tells CardioExchange what it’s really like to be dubbed a “Best Doc” in one’s field by a local magazine. Can you relate to his amusing account? Share your experiences here.

September 20th, 2010

Encouraging Observational Data on Clopidogrel and PPIs

Compared with a PPI alone, the combination of clopidogrel and a PPI does not increase risk for cardiovascular events, according to a large observational study from Denmark published in the Annals of Internal Medicine. Mette Charlot and colleagues analyzed data from 56,406 Danish patients discharged after a first MI and found no difference between the treatments in the rate of cardiovascular death or rehospitalization for MI or stroke.

In an accompanying editorial, Joao Paulo de Aquino Lima and James Brophy are critical of current warnings about PPI/clopidogrel interactions because they “are based on a paucity of quality clinical studies and instead have relied more on in vitro platelet-inhibition studies.” They conclude that “unbiased science should be the final arbiter in determining the risk for any putative drug interaction, but the modulating role that the social, cultural, economic, and political context in which medicine and clinical research is practiced should be appreciated.”

September 20th, 2010

FDA Panel Unanimously Recommends Approval for Dabigatran

The FDA’s Cardiovascular and Renal Drugs Advisory Committee voted 9-0 in favor of approval of  dabigatran (Pradaxa, Boehringer Ingelheim) for the prevention of stroke in patients with AF. The panel was split on whether both dosages (150 mg bid and 110 mg bid) used in the RE-LY trial should gain approval, although in an informal straw poll, a majority appeared to favor approval for both dosages. (The FDA reviewers had recommended approval for only the higher dosage.) Most panel members also supported language on the label summarizing the superiority of the 150 mg dose over warfarin in RE-LY.

September 20th, 2010

What Does Gregg Stone Most Want to See at TCT This Year?

CardioExchange asked Gregg Stone, Director of the Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics (TCT) 2010 meeting, what he thinks will be the three most important trials or topics presented at this year’s conference.

The most important and impactful trial is undoubtedly the PARTNER trial, which is a large randomized trial of transcatheter aortic valve implantation compared to medical therapy in patients with inoperable aortic stenosis. If the trial is positive, it will usher into the U.S. a whole new field of transcatheter valve therapies specifically related to aortic valve stenosis. We’re very excited about that, no matter what it shows, positive or negative. The trial also has worldwide implications, because tens of thousands of these procedures have now been performed globally. A large-scale, randomized trial like this trumps everything else.

The second most important trial in my mind is ZILVER PTX, which is the first trial in a long time to test a drug-eluting stent in the peripheral arteries. There’s been very little in this area and this is a new paclitaxel-eluting stent optimized for the periphery. This trial might also have a big impact on the field, in that it could establish a whole new territory for stents.

My third choice isn’t one trial, but a group of trials testing everolimus-eluting stents, which are by far the most popular stents used in the world today. We’re going to see several very large trials that will either further establish their position or reveal their weaknesses. Two-year results from the SPIRIT IV and COMPARE trials will contain data on nearly 6,000 patients. The everolimus-eluting stents looked great at one year, but how will they look at two years? That’s a key question. In addition, the comparator in these studies used the relatively weak paclitaxel coating. At TCT this year we’ll see several trials with a total of 5,500 patients randomized to either everolimus-eluting or the equally potent sirolimus-eluting stents, so it will be much more difficult for the everolimus-eluting stents to demonstrate superiority in these trials.

September 19th, 2010

A Rich OASIS for Your Journal Club

I’m always scouting for papers to discuss in journal club with my students. Earlier this month, I found the perfect pair: two simultaneously published articles from the industry-funded CURRENT–OASIS 7 randomized trial, one in the New England Journal of Medicine and the other in the Lancet. Many of the authors of the two papers were the same.

First, a recap: In a 2×2 factorial design, investigators compared higher- with standard-dose aspirin (either 300–325 mg or 75–100 mg daily) and higher- with standard-dose clopidogrel (either 600-mg loading, then 150 mg/day for 6 days, and 75 mg/day thereafter or 300-mg loading and 75 mg/day thereafter) in patients with acute coronary syndromes. All 25,086 participants were scheduled for percutaneous coronary intervention no more than 72 hours after randomization; about two thirds eventually underwent PCI. The primary endpoint was cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, or stroke at 30 days.

The NEJM article reports the main finding: a failure to demonstrate the superiority of the higher doses over the standard doses (4.2% vs. 4.4% incidence of the primary endpoint for both aspirin and clopidogrel). In subgroup analyses, a predetermined threshold for significance of P≤0.01 was used, appropriate (as the authors note) for the multiple comparisons performed. (Some might even argue that the threshold was generous, given that there were 13 subgroups.) Within those parameters, no evidence of a significant interaction was found for any of the prespecified subgroups. The authors conclude, without qualification, that outcomes did not differ significantly between the higher- and standard-dose groups.

In the simultaneously published Lancet article, the authors pivot from the NEJM article and focus on the subgroup that underwent PCI, which was one of the 13 subgroups reported in the NEJM. Although PCI was planned for everyone who was randomized, about a third of the patients did not undergo the procedure because they were not considered suitable based on angiography findings. In the group that did eventually have a PCI, there was no difference in the primary endpoint between higher- and standard-dose aspirin (4.1% vs. 4.2%) but a “significant” difference for higher- versus standard-dose clopidogrel (3.9% vs. 4.5%; P=0.039). The authors endorse double-dose clopidogrel for ACS patients who are treated with early PCI.

Teaching Point 1: Avoid simultaneously publishing articles that spin the same data in completely different ways. Anyone who believes everything he or she reads in these high-impact journals would have been quite confused this month.

Teaching Point 2: A negative result should be called what it is. For reasons they articulate themselves, the NEJM authors prespecified the threshold for significance in the subgroup analyses at P≤0.01. They then use the term “nominally significant” to describe the PCI subgroup findings yet acknowledge in their discussion that the result did not meet their significance threshold and, therefore, “could have been due to the play of chance.” I would have preferred that they state plainly that the result was not significant.

The Lancet authors, of course, tell a different story in their discussion, saying that the data “suggest a clear benefit of double-dose clopidogrel” in the PCI subgroup. In listing the study’s limitations, they make no mention that the interaction was negative by their prespecified standard. Read in isolation, the Lancet article appears to present persuasive evidence for giving the double dose to these patients; read in tandem with the NEJM article, it obscures the fact that the interaction is negative and, therefore, that the evidence for the use of double-dose clopidogrel is weak.

Teaching Point 3: It’s best to select subgroups using information available at randomization. Even if the interaction had been positive and the evidence had clearly favored the use of double-dose clopidogrel in patients undergoing PCI, the clinical implications still would have been murky because this subgroup could not have been identified at the time the decision was being made. (Angiography results determined who would and who would not undergo PCI.) That leaves the reader to speculate, as the Lancet authors do, about the implications for practice. The authors go ahead and suggest starting everyone with a double dose of clopidogrel and discontinuing that higher dose when it becomes clear that a patient will not undergo PCI. However, this trial simply did not test that strategy, so it must be understood as speculation.

These articles earn my top rating for use in a journal club. Rarely will you witness famous authors draw such different conclusions about identical data published simultaneously in two prestigious journals. It’s a perfect opportunity for students and others to learn about interaction testing, significance levels, and subgroup selection.

What lessons do you derive from these studies? Do you agree with the NEJM authors or the Lancet authors? You can’t agree with both.

September 17th, 2010

FDA Announces Safety Review of Pioglitazone

The FDA announced today that it was undertaking a safety review of pioglitazone (Actos). The review was initiated after the FDA received data from Takeda, the drug’s manufacturer, suggesting a possible increase in bladder cancer in patients taking the drug for more than 2 years. The data are taken from a planned 5-year analysis of an ongoing 10-year epidemiological study designed to examine the association of the drug with bladder cancer, following earlier studies suggesting a possible risk. Although the current analysis found no overall association between pioglitazone and bladder cancer, a further analysis found an increased risk of bladder cancer in those taking the highest cumulative doses of the drug and in those with the longer exposure to the drug.

The FDA said it has not yet concluded that piolglitazone increases the risk of bladder cancer and advised healthcare professionals to continue to follow the recommendation in the drug label.

September 17th, 2010

Study Identifies MicroRNA Pattern Linked to Diabetes

Researchers in Britain and Europe have identified a microRNA pattern that may help identify people at risk for developing type 2 diabetes and who may go on to have cardiovascular events. “It’s very important for the clinician to define those diabetic patients who are at the highest risk of developing cardiovascular complications,” said the senior author of the Circulation Research paper, Manuel Mayr, in a press release issued by the American Heart Association. “We hope that this new class of blood markers may give additional insight that we’re currently not getting from the other clinical tests.”

In an accompanying editorial, Romano Regazzi writes that the study “unveils the existence of a plasma microRNA signature of diabetes.” He speculates on the possibility that “changes in the microRNA profile could not only signal the development of the disease but may also contribute to its manifestations,” suggesting the possibility of novel therapeutic interventions for diabetes.

September 17th, 2010

FDA Grants Expanded Indication to CRT-D Devices

The FDA has expanded the indication for CRT-D devices made by Boston Scientific. Previously, the devices had been approved only in NYHA Class III and IV patients. The expanded indication now includes Class I and II patients who have left bundle branch block. The expanded indication is based on data from the MADIT-CRT trial.

“This approval allows heart failure patients with left bundle branch block to benefit from this therapy,” said Jeffrey Shuren, director of the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, in an FDA press release. “The FDA is pleased to safely make this new technology available for a greater number of heart failure patients.”