Filip K Knop, Anthony Kam, Jose Antônio Marin-Neto, Alfredo Ramirez, Philip Böhme, Miguel Urina, Angel L. Fernández, Bjarne Nørgaard, Valdis Pirags, Margret Leosdottir, Salim Yusuf, Heather Lochnan, Kina Höglund, Bu Yeap, Ricardo Bohorquez, Marina F Kalashnikova, Fredrik Folke, ALVARO AVEZUM, Igor Bondarenko, Monica Acevedo, Francesco Cacciatore, Weiping Jia, Sergio Grunbaum, Filipa Costa, Neslihan Bascil Tutuncu, Hermione Price, Sudeep K, Aivars Lejnieks, Jeong-Taek Woo, Martin Magnusson, Assoc. Prof. Darko Katalinic, M.D., Ph.D., Aylin YILDIRIR, Laura Bryan, Patricio Lopez-Jaramillo, Adriana Forti, Flavia Lucia Lombardo, Malgorzata Sikora-Frac, José Ramón González Juanatey, Peter Colman, Olga Bulkina, Melanie Davies, Hertzel Gerstein, Jackie Bosch, Alina Babenko, Qifu Li, Alvaro Reyes, Cecilia Jimeno, Yury Vasyuk, Rodrigo Bagur, Sanja Barsic Ostojic, Anna Novials, Andrzej Budaj, and Anne Taylor
ims: Impaired fasting glucose (IFG), impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), and diabetes arise due to insufficient insulin secretion and are risk factors for cardiovascular (CV) events. Thus, targeting normal fasting glucose levels with insulin may reduce CV events. Previous studies suggest that omega-3 fatty acid supplements may reduce CV death ; however, their effect in high- risk dysglycemic individuals is not known. Methods: People aged > or = 50 years with evidence of CV disease and with IFG, IGT, newly detected or established diabetes (on 0 or 1 oral agent), and a local glycated hemoglobin < 150% of the upper limit of normal for that assay were recruited and allocated to (a) either 1 daily injection of insulin glargine with the dose titrated to achieve a fasting plasma glucose < or = 5.3 mmol/L (95 mg/dL), or standard glycemic care ; and (b) either omega-3-acid ethyl esters 90 (1 g consisting of EPA 465 mg and DHA 375 mg) or identical placebo, according to a 2 x 2 factorial design. The 2 different primary outcomes for the insulin and omega-3 fatty acid arms are CV events and CV death, respectively. Results: A total of 12, 612 (mean age 64, 35% women) people in 40 countries were randomized during a 2-year period ending December 2005. Eighty-two percent had established diabetes, 6% had new diabetes, and 12% had IGT or IFG ; the mean fasting plasma glucose was 7.3 mmol/L (131 mg/dL). Conclusions: The ORIGIN trial will determine whether or not either or both of these interventions can reduce CV events.