Statin Might Help Fight Blood Clots in Veins

Cholesterol-lowering Crestor cut risk by 43 percent, study found

Posted: March 29, 2009

By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

SUNDAY, March 29 (HealthDay News) -- In addition to dramatically reducing the incidence of heart attacks and stroke, the cholesterol-lowering drug Crestor appears to have another important benefit: reducing the rate of blood clots in the veins, new research has found.

Interestingly, participants in this study, being presented Sunday at the American College of Cardiology annual meeting in Orlando, Fla., did not have elevated levels of LDL, or "bad," cholesterol, but they did have increased levels of the inflammatory marker called C-reactive protein (CRP).

"This suggests that a statin has potential beneficial effects on the venous circulation, not just the arterial circulation," said Dr. Carl J. Lavie, medical director of cardiac rehabilitation at the Ochsner Heart and Vascular Institute in New Orleans.

Lavie, who was not involved with the study, cautioned, however, that "this data is probably not powerful enough to use statins just for this reason."

The findings also suggest that statins may derive some of their benefit from their effect on C-reactive protein.

In fact, another study, also being presented at the meeting, concluded that, besides lowering cholesterol, part of the success of statins in reducing cardiovascular events such as a heart attack can be attributed to the lowering levels of CRP.

Both studies are based on data from the landmark JUPITER trial, sponsored by the drug maker AstraZeneca, which markets Crestor (rosuvastatin). The first trial is being published early in the April 30 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, while the second will appear in an upcoming issue of The Lancet.

For the JUPITER trial, nearly 18,000 men and women, average age 66, were randomly assigned to receive 20 milligrams of Crestor daily or a placebo. All the participants were "apparently healthy," with LDL cholesterol levels under 130 milligrams per deciliter of blood, and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein levels of 2 mg/liter or higher (slightly elevated). Just over a third of the participants were obese.

After a median follow-up of almost two years, Crestor was found to reduce the risk of blood clots in the veins (venous thromboembolism) by 43 percent compared to a placebo. The risk reduction was seen both in those without risk factors and those with risk factors for clots, such as people who were hospitalized, had cancer or who had undergone surgery, the study found.

There was no elevated risk of bleeding in people taking Crestor.

"We're very pleased that the drug seems to have this beneficial effect," said study author Robert J. Glynn, a biostatistician in the division of preventive medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. He added that the effect would probably also be seen in other statins.

The second trial found that participants who had reductions in both LDL and CRP levels had a reduction in vascular events that ranged from 65 percent to 79 percent.

The JUPITER trial was halted early last year when researchers noted a 44 percent reduction in the risk of heart attack and stroke in the Crestor group.

The mechanisms by which statins lower clot risk aren't well understood, although some experts suspect the lowering of CRP may explain the decline.

"High CRP also has been a risk factor for developing arterial disease, and maybe the same now holds true for venous disease," Lavie said. "It supports the notion that cholesterol and/or CRP play a role in venous thromboembolic disease as well as arterial disease, and that statins appear to play a beneficial role in this as well."

Experts estimated that the original findings from the JUPITER trial -- that Crestor reduced the risk of heart attacks and stroke by 44 percent -- might add 11 million people to the already large population of older Americans taking statins.

So does this mean everyone will eventually be on statins to guard their heart health?

"It's an expensive drug [and] it's always wrong to say take a pill and don't deal with your life. People need to exercise and change their diet," Glynn stressed.

More information

The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more on blood clots.

Blood Clot Natural Prevention

Blood clots can lead to many health complicatons including stroke and are more common among inactive and/or obese individuals.

Blood clots are life threatening however exercise can help prevent their formation and assist in dissoving of existing clots. This fact was discovered and presented to the American Heart association in 2003 by the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center.

The study found that levels of an essential blood clot dissolver known as tissue type plaminogen activator (t-PA) are greatly diminished in overweight men (by as much as 30%). This reduced protection in the blood stream leads eventually to problems with blood clots.

Walking for a period of three months for a mere 45 minutes a day, five days a week however increased the amount of t-PA in the obese participants blood by as much as 50%. The study showed that after this walking regimine the obese subjects had similar levels of t-PA in their blood to that of lean participants in the study. Read more at http://www.trekdesk.com/walk/Blood_Clot.html

Sue of AZ @ Jun 23, 2009 22:37:23 PM

Arryhthmia's

"If you are taking Crestor and you experience any muscle pain or weakness, tell you doctor immediately, as it may be a sign of a rare but serious side effect". Sound Familiar?

First of all, it's not rare. Secondly, it is extremely serious. That is the same warning for all statins. The muscle pain and weakness everyone complains about is the oxygen debt and

lowered ATP caused by all statin drugs. If these drugs work so well, why did Tim Russert die?

His total cholesterol was only 105! That's right...105!!! If these drugs work so well, why hasn't death by heart attack gone down sharply? It's estimated that 25 million Americans are

on statins. That is insane. Lipitor alone is a 9.8 billion dollar drug.

Statin drugs may, or may not decrease clots. One thing I do know. All statin drugs may contribute to a potential arryhthmia. Just ask Tim Russert's cardiologist.

Doc J of MI @ Mar 30, 2009 09:17:40 AM

Statins vs Exercise

Maybe we should also look simultaneously at the effect of exercise on blood clots. Walking daily also has the effect of eliminating blood clots. Even better it improves brain function. No pills, just walk. You can even walk all day at work now with treadmill desks like the TrekDesk. Our society seems too entrenched in medicinal answers, walking 5 miles a day can truly work wonders.

Tammy Edwards of AZ @ Mar 29, 2009 23:10:43 PM

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