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Alirocumab Reduces Total Nonfatal Cardiovascular and Fatal Events: The ODYSSEY OUTCOMES Trial

Authors :
Michael, Szarek
Harvey D, White
Gregory G, Schwartz
Marco, Alings
Deepak L, Bhatt
Vera A, Bittner
Chern-En, Chiang
Rafael, Diaz
Jay M, Edelberg
Shaun G, Goodman
Corinne, Hanotin
Robert A, Harrington
J Wouter, Jukema
Takeshi, Kimura
Robert Gabor, Kiss
Guillaume, Lecorps
Kenneth W, Mahaffey
Angèle, Moryusef
Robert, Pordy
Matthew T, Roe
Pierluigi, Tricoci
Denis, Xavier
Andreas M, Zeiher
Ph Gabriel, Steg
Rushton-Smith, Sophie
Source :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 73(4):387-396
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Background: The ODYSSEY OUTCOMES (Evaluation of Cardiovascular Outcomes After an Acute Coronary Syndrome During Treatment With Alirocumab) trial compared alirocumab with placebo, added to high-intensity or maximum-tolerated statin treatment, after acute coronary syndrome (ACS) in 18, 924 patients. Alirocumab reduced the first occurrence of the primary composite endpoint and was associated with fewer all-cause deaths. Objectives: This pre-specified analysis determined the extent to which alirocumab reduced total (first and subsequent) nonfatal cardiovascular events and all-cause deaths in ODYSSEY OUTCOMES. Methods: Hazard functions for total nonfatal cardiovascular events (myocardial infarction, stroke, ischemia-driven coronary revascularization, and hospitalization for unstable angina or heart failure) and death were jointly estimated, linked by a shared frailty accounting for patient risk heterogeneity and correlated within-patient nonfatal events. An association parameter also quantified the strength of the linkage between risk of nonfatal events and death. The model provides accurate relative estimates of nonfatal event risk if nonfatal events are associated with increased risk for death. Results: With 3, 064 first and 5, 425 total events, 190 fewer first and 385 fewer total nonfatal cardiovascular events or deaths were observed with alirocumab compared with placebo. Alirocumab reduced total nonfatal cardiovascular events (hazard ratio: 0.87; 95% confidence interval: 0.82 to 0.93) and death (hazard ratio: 0.83; 95% confidence interval: 0.71 to 0.97) in the presence of a strong association between nonfatal and fatal event risk. Conclusions: In patients with ACS, the total number of nonfatal cardiovascular events and deaths prevented with alirocumab was twice the number of first events prevented. Consequently, total event reduction is a more comprehensive metric to capture the totality of alirocumab clinical efficacy after ACS.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07351097
Volume :
73
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....c3259c45b47fe93281ae1034519d5f97