MedPath

Statin Drugs to Prevent Complications During Surgery

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Inflammation
Myocardial Infarction
Myocardial Ischemia
Interventions
Drug: Placebo
Registration Number
NCT00967434
Lead Sponsor
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute
Brief Summary

Patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery frequently experience perioperative cardiac complications that may be due to excess inflammatory reactions. Lipid lowering drugs called HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors or statins, have anti-inflammatory effects. Although favourable evidence suggests these drugs could also prevent perioperative cardiac complications, definitive evidence of anti-inflammatory effects and benefit is lacking. The purpose of this study to measure the impact of a atorvastatin on patients undergoing surgery. It will attempt to determine the speed of drug effect as measured by the impact the drug has on the levels of the inflammatory mediator called C-reactive protein after surgery. It is hypothesized that the perioperative use of atorvastatin will safely reduce the postoperative rise in CRP levels at 48 hours after elective vascular surgery. This effect, would then translate into a reduction of adverse perioperative complications including reduction in postoperative myocardial ischemia episodes (as measured through Holter monitoring).

Detailed Description

Despite modern improvements in operative care, non-cardiac surgery is still associated with significant and costly cardiac complications. The incidence of major perioperative cardiac events varies, ranging from 1% in unselected populations to 15% or more in vascular surgical patients. An estimated 2 million North Americans yearly experience a perioperative cardiac event with an associated mortality of 30-50% and financial burden of over 20 billion dollars. Best evidence suggests that medical optimization is the preferred strategy to reduce the risks. There exists favorable physiologic evidence and promising clinical observations that statin drugs may prevent perioperative complications. We propose a randomized controlled trial to evaluate short-term atorvastatin versus placebo on inflammatory changes and myocardial ischemia in patients undergoing high-risk non-cardiac surgery.

The traditional belief on the etiology of perioperative myocardial events has been that supply-demand discrepancies due to hypotension or hypoxia compromise cardiac oxygen delivery thus resulting in myocardial ischemia and infarction are in dispute. Therapies that target supply-demand imbalance, including perioperative beta-blockers, have been disappointing. Emerging evidence now suggests that most perioperative cardiac events are similar to non-operative events where rupture of coronary plaques and thrombosis are central to the development of acute coronary events. Key elements to plaque rupture are inflammation and endothelial dysfunction. Elevated inflammatory markers, particularly C-reactive protein is associated with adverse cardiac events. Drugs known as statins offer benefits beyond their traditional improvement of lipid levels. Statins have so-called pleiotropic effects that include anti-inflammatory, endothelial function changes and plaque stabilization. Atorvastatin, a statin with a good safety profile, is particularly effective at improving inflammatory levels and decreasing cardiac events including death.

Perioperatively, elevated C-reactive protein levels after surgery are associated with perioperative complications including cardiac events. Thus, strategies to control perioperative inflammation may reduce complications. Retrospective studies and small prospective studies suggest that statins would reduce perioperative complications but definitive evidence is lacking. Questions regarding dose and timing of dosing is unclear. Likewise, little is proven on the potential pathophysiology of atorvastatin on reducing perioperative myocardial events. Our hypothesis is that atorvastatin use will reduce the postoperative rise in CRP levels at 48 hours.

Eligible non-cardiac surgical patients will be randomized into 3 groups with 3 stages of treatment; namely stage 1 (preoperative period up to 7 days), stage 2 (immediate preoperative), and stage 3 (first 7 postoperative days). Group A will receive atorvastatin in all 3 stages. Group B receives placebo in stage 1 but atorvastatin stages 2 and 3. Group C receives placebo in all 3 stages. Atorvastatin dose in all cases will be 80 mg. C-reactive protein and lipid levels assess statin effects. Safety is assessed by liver enzymes and CK levels. Myocardial events assessed by troponin T, ECG and Holter monitoring. Follow-up at 6 months will be done.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
60
Inclusion Criteria
  • elective high-risk surgery defined by use of the POISE criteria
  • over 45 years of age
Exclusion Criteria
  • lack of informed consent
  • contraindication to statin (i.e. liver insufficiency or cirrhosis, active muscular disorder or myopathy, or previous adverse reaction to statin)
  • pregnant
  • enrolled in another conflicting study
  • previously enrolled in STAR VaS
  • presently using a statin drug

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
FACTORIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Group C- PlaceboPlaceboPatients receive placebo daily for up 7 preoperative days, placebo on day of surgery and placebo daily for up to 7 postoperative days.
Group B- Atorvastatin postopAtorvastatinPlacebo administered for up to 7 preoperative days, atorvastatin 80 mg administered on day of surgery and daily for up to 7 postoperative days.
Group A- atorvastatin in pre and postopAtorvastatinAtorvastatin 80 mg administered daily for at least 7 preoperative days, 80 mg on day of surgery and 80 mg daily for up to 7 postoperative days.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
C-reactive protein levels at 48 hours postoperatively48 hours
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
perioperative myocardial ischemia as detected by Holter monitoring48 hours
liver enzyme levelsup to 7 postoperative days
perioperative myocardial injury as measured by troponin levelsup to 7 postoperative days
myopathy as assessed by CK levelsup to 7 postoperative days

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

The Ottawa Hospital

🇨🇦

Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath