EDITORIALS
Editorials represent the opinions
of the authors and JAMA and not those of
the American Medical Association.
Can a Potent Statin Actually Regress
Coronary Atherosclerosis?
Roger S. Blumenthal, MD
Navin K. Kapur, MD
S
INCE THE INITIAL REPORT BY SONES AND SHIREY IN
1962,
1
coronary angiography has been the standard
method used to define the severity and extent of
coronary atherosclerosis. By only providing a sil-
houette of the coronary lumen, however, coronary angiog-
raphy frequently underestimates the true burden of ath-
eroma in the arterial wall. In this issue of JAMA, Nissen et
al present important new data on coronary atherosclerosis
based on their findings from the ASTEROID (A Study To
Evaluate the Effect of Rosuvastatin on Intravascular
Ultrasound-Derived Coronary Atheroma Burden) trial.
2
This multicenter, intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) study
assessed the extent of coronary atheroma at baseline and
after 2 years of treatment with the maximally approved
dose (40 mg) of rosuvastatin, the statin most effective at
reducing levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol
(LDL-C). Each pair of baseline and 24-month IVUS studies
was analyzed in blinded fashion.
The investigators found that 349 of 507 participants had
“evaluable” serial IVUS studies. After 2 years of treatment
with rosuvastatin, mean LDL-C levels decreased by 53%
(from 130 to 61 mg/dL) and mean high-density lipopro-
tein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels increased by 15% (from 43
to 49 mg/dL). Rosuvastatin therapy was associated with a
modest decrease in mean percent atheroma volume (from
39.6% to 38.6%) and mean atheroma volume in the most
diseased 10-mm subsegment (from 65 to 59 mm
3
). Impor-
tantly, all patients either had no statin therapy for more than
3 months during the preceding year or required a 28-day
washout period before enrollment to obtain accurate base-
line lipid values prior to the initiation of therapy.
The authors conclude that very aggressive LDL-C low-
ering in the setting of a moderate increase in HDL-C re-
sults in regression of coronary atherosclerosis. While the
results of this study are exciting, they are tempered by the
lack of a control group receiving a somewhat less intensive
LDL-C lowering regimen, the absence of paired IVUS mea-
surements in less diseased coronary segments to demon-
strate reproducibility of atheroma volume measurements,
and exclusion of patients with coronary stenoses measur-
ing greater than 50% throughout a target segment. Further-
more, the study design raises questions about whether dif-
ferences in the amount of atheroma regression depend on
whether a patient is “statin naive” in comparison with those
previously receiving statin therapy. This is particularly im-
portant when trying to evaluate the findings of this study
in the context of the Reversing Atherosclerosis with Ag-
gressive Lipid Lowering (REVERSAL) study, in which pa-
tients were allowed to be taking lipid-lowering therapy prior
to study enrollment.
3
The authors of the ASTEROID trial deemed it “ethically
unacceptable to randomize patients in this high-risk group
to low-intensity treatment.”
2
However, it appears that most
enrolled patients were not at extremely high risk (eg, the
clinical indication for angiography typically consisted of stable
or unstable ischemic chest pain syndromes or abnormal ex-
ercise testing results for angina and only 13% had diabetes
mellitus). Furthermore, the baseline LDL-C level for en-
rolled patients was only mildly elevated, the HDL-C level
was average, and 17% of individuals were not taking aspi-
rin at baseline. Given current guidelines, such patients would
not necessarily be considered high risk and treatment with
a less aggressive lipid-lowering regimen (target LDL-C level
of approximately 90-100 mg/dL) would be accepted as stan-
dard of care.
4
Unfortunately, the ASTEROID study does not provide de-
finitive information regarding the relationship of LDL-C low-
ering and extent of coronary atherosclerosis regression to
determine if high-intensity treatment is required to achieve
regression. Since the authors report a similar magnitude of
regression for patients above and below the median HDL-C
and LDL-C levels (Table 4 in the article
2
), less intensive
changes in LDL-C levels, non–HDL-C levels, or both, and
HDL-C levels also may have led to modest regression.
Comparison of high-dose rosuvastatin with simvastatin—
which performed well in the Heart Protection Study (even
in patients with baseline LDL-C levels 100 mg/dL)—
would have been a more informative study design.
5
The
choice of simvastatin would have been a good one because
See Preliminary Communication.
Author Affiliations: The Johns Hopkins Ciccarone Preventive Cardiology Center,
Baltimore, Md.
Corresponding Author: Roger S. Blumenthal, MD, The Johns Hopkins Ciccarone
Preventive Cardiology Center, Blalock 524C, 600 N Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21287
(rblument@jhmi.edu).
©2006 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. (Reprinted) JAMA, Published online March 13, 2006 E1