Statin therapy was associated with a significantly smaller annualized decrease in aortic valve area compared to no statin therapy (0.06±0.16 cm2 vs 0.11±0.18 cm2; P=0.03).
Cohort (n=174)
Does statin therapy reduce the progression of calcific aortic stenosis in patients with mild to moderate disease?
Retrospective data suggest that statin therapy may slow the echocardiographic progression of mild to moderate calcific aortic stenosis.
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 0.06% vs 0.11%
valor p: p=0.03
Background Recent studies have supported the hypothesis that calcific aortic stenosis is the product of an active inflammatory process, with similarities to atherosclerosis. We sought to determine whether therapy with hydroxymethylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors (statins) might slow the progression of aortic stenosis. Methods and Results A retrospective study of 174 patients (mean age 68±12 years) with mild to moderate calcific aortic stenosis was conducted. Patients required normal left ventricular function, ≤2+ aortic regurgitation, and ≥2 echocardiograms performed at least 12 months apart. Fifty-seven patients (33%) received treatment with a statin; the remaining 117 (67%) did not. The statin group was older and had a higher prevalence of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and coronary disease. During a mean follow-up of 21 months, patients treated with statin had a smaller increase in peak and mean gradient and a smaller decrease in aortic valve area. When annualized, the decrease in aortic valve area for the nonstatin group was 0.11±0.18 cm 2 compared with 0.06±0.16 cm 2 for those treated with a statin ( P =0.03). In multivariate analysis, statin usage was a significant independent predictor of a smaller decrease in valve area ( P =0.01) and a lesser increase in peak gradient ( P =0.02). Conclusions Statin-treated patients, despite a higher risk profile for progression, had reduced aortic stenosis progression compared with those not treated with a statin. These data provide justification for a prospective randomized trial to substantiate whether statin therapy slows the progression of aortic stenosis.
Novaro et al. (Tue,) conducted a cohort in mild to moderate calcific aortic stenosis (n=174). hydroxymethylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors (statins) vs. no statin was evaluated on annualized decrease in aortic valve area (cm2) (p=0.03). Statin therapy was associated with a significantly smaller annualized decrease in aortic valve area compared to no statin therapy (0.06±0.16 cm2 vs 0.11±0.18 cm2; P=0.03).