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Niacin Plus Statin to Prevent Vascular Events

AIM HIGH: Niacin Plus Statin to Prevent Vascular Events

Status
Terminated
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00120289
Enrollment
3414
Registered
2005-07-15
Start date
2005-09-30
Completion date
2012-12-31
Last updated
2016-04-06

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Cardiovascular Diseases, Heart Diseases, Cerebrovascular Accident, Coronary Disease, Atherosclerosis, Myocardial Infarction

Brief summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether raising good cholesterol with a drug based on the vitamin niacin, while lowering bad cholesterol with a statin drug, can prevent more heart disease than the statin alone.

Detailed description

BACKGROUND: Coronary heart disease (CHD) remains the leading cause of death and disability in the Western world, with approximately 12.6 million individuals in the United States having a history of myocardial infarction (MI), angina, or both. There is mounting evidence that conventional therapies aimed at traditional risk factors have not optimized clinical outcomes. For example, in the Heart Protection Study with 20,536 subjects, the 5-year risk of a first major vascular event (nonfatal MI or CHD death, stroke, or coronary or noncoronary revascularization) among placebo-treated patients was 25%. Treatment with simvastatin reduced this risk to 20% over 5 years, which would project out to a 10-year risk of 40%. (The National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III considers high risk or CHD equivalent a 10-year risk of an event greater than 20%.) Even among patients entering the study with baseline low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) already near or at goal (i.e., LDL-C less than 116 mg/dL) and who achieved a mean on-trial LDL-C of 70 mg/dL with simvastatin, the 5-year risk of an event was still 18% (projecting to a 10-year risk of 36%). This residual and unacceptably high risk is likely due to the increasing prevalence of obesity, type II diabetes mellitus, and the metabolic syndrome. These disorders are typically accompanied by a constellation of abnormalities that include impaired glycemic control, hypertension, procoagulant and inflammatory states, and atherogenic dyslipidemia. The latter includes a wide spectrum of lipid abnormalities (low HDL-C, high triglycerides and triglyceride-rich remnant lipoproteins, and a preponderance of small dense, highly-oxidizable LDL particles). Conventional LDL-C-focused therapies are not effective in targeting this type of dyslipidemia. Evidence that therapy directed at atherogenic dyslipidemia among patients with CHD can lower outcomes was shown with gemfibrozil in the VA-HIT trial, which showed a 22 to 24% cardiovascular (CV) event reduction by raising HDL-C (by an average of 6%) and lowering triglycerides (by an average of 31%). Niacin is an even more effective agent for simultaneously raising HDL-C and lowering triglycerides and levels of small dense LDL, and holds the most promise among existing therapies for substantial risk reduction in this population when added to a statin. This was demonstrated in the HDL Atherosclerosis Treatment Study (HATS) trial in which atherosclerosis progression was virtually halted and CV events were reduced by 60 to 90% using combined niacin plus statin therapy. DESIGN NARRATIVE: AIM-HIGH is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, controlled clinical trial designed to test whether the drug combination of extended release niacin plus simvastatin is superior to simvastatin alone, at comparable levels of on-treatment LDL-C, for delaying the time to a first major CV disease outcome over a 4-year median follow-up in patients with atherogenic dyslipidemia. Prior clinical trials have found only 25 to 35% CV risk reduction using statin monotherapy (i.e., event rate 2/3 to 3/4 of placebo rate). The study is needed to confirm whether statin-niacin combination therapy, designed to target a wider spectrum of dyslipidemic factors in addition to LDL-C, will provide a more substantial (greater than 50%) reduction of CV events. Epidemiologic studies confirm the high prevalence of atherogenic dyslipidemia and its impact on CV event rates. Preliminary clinical trials suggest that targeting these factors with dyslipidemic therapy will reduce CV events. The study will enroll an estimated 3,300 men and women more than 45 years old at high risk of recurrent CV events by virtue of having established CV disease together with the two dyslipidemic elements of metabolic syndrome: low HDL-cholesterol (HDL-C) (less than or equal to 40 mg/dl) and high triglycerides (TG) (greater than or equal to 150 mg/dl). The study specifically aims to test this hypothesis for the primary composite clinical end point of CHD death, nonfatal MI, ischemic stroke, hospitalization for acute coronary syndrome with objective evidence of ischemia (troponin-positive or ST-segment deviation), or symptom-driven coronary or cerebral revascularization. Secondary end points include the composite of CHD death, nonfatal MI, ischemic stroke, or hospitalization for high-risk acute coronary syndrome; the composite of CHD death, nonfatal MI or ischemic stroke; and cardiovascular mortality.

Interventions

2,000 mg/day or 1,500 mg/day if higher dose not tolerated

DRUGSimvastatin

Dose adjusted to achieve LDL-C 40 mg/dL - 80 mg/dL, adding ezetimibe (10 mg/day) if needed to achieve LDL-C target

Sponsors

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
CollaboratorNIH
Abbott
CollaboratorINDUSTRY
Axio Research. LLC
Lead SponsorINDUSTRY

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
45 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Men and women aged 45 and older with established vascular disease and atherogenic dyslipidemia * Established vascular disease defined as one or more of the following: (1) documented coronary artery disease (CAD); (2) documented cerebrovascular or carotid disease; (3) documented symptomatic peripheral arterial disease (PAD) * Atherogenic dyslipidemia defined as: (1) LDL-C of less than or equal to 160 mg/dL (4.1 mmol/L); (2) HDL-C of less than or equal to 40 mg/dL (1.0 mmol/L) for men or less than or equal to 50 mg/dL (1.3 mmol/L) for women; (3) TG greater than or equal to 150 mg/dL (1.7 mmol/L) and less than or equal to 400 mg/dL (4.5 mmol/L) * For patients entering the trial on a statin: (1) the upper limit for LDL-C is adjusted according to the specific statin and statin dose; (2) HDL-C of less than or equal to 42 mg/dL (1.1 mmol/L) for men or less than or equal to 53 mg/dL (1.4 mmol/L) for women; (3) TG greater than or equal to 125 mg/dL (1.4 mmol/L) and less than or equal to 400 mg/DL (4.5 mmol/L)

Exclusion criteria

* Coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery within 1 year of planned enrollment (run-in phase) * Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) within 4 weeks of planned enrollment (run-in phase) * Hospitalization for acute coronary syndrome and discharge within 4 weeks of planned enrollment (run-in phase) * Fasting glucose greater than 180 mg/dL (10 mmol/L) or hemoglobin A1C greater than 9% * For patients with diabetes, inability or refusal to use a glucometer for home monitoring of blood glucose * Concomitant use of drugs with a high probability of increasing the risk for hepatotoxicity or myopathy, such as those predominantly metabolized by cytochrome P450 system 3A4, including but not limited to cyclosporine, gemfibrozil, fenofibrate, itraconazole, ketoconazole, HIV protease inhibitors, nefazodone, verapamil, amiodarone; lipid-lowering drugs (other than the investigational drugs) such as statins, bile-acid sequestrants, cholesterol absorption inhibitors (e.g., ezetimibe), fibrates or high-dose, antioxidant vitamins (vitamins C, E, or beta carotene) that can interfere with the HDL-raising effect of niacin

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Composite End Point of CHD Death, Nonfatal MI, Ischemic Stroke, Hospitalization for Non-ST Segment Elevation Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), or Symptom-driven Coronary or Cerebral RevascularizationTime to first event measured from date of randomization through last follow-up visit (common termination) for an average of 36 months follow-up, maximum 66 months.

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
Composite Endpoint of CHD Death, Non-fatal MI, High-risk ACS or Ischemic StrokeTime to first event measured from date of randomization through last follow-up visit (common termination) for an average of 36 months follow-up, maximum 66 months
Composite Endpoint of CHD Death, Non-fatal MI, or Ischemic StrokeTime to first event measured from date of randomization through last follow-up visit (common termination) for an average of 36 months follow-up, maximum 66 months
Cardiovascular MortalityTime to first event measured from date of randomization through last follow-up visit (common termination), for an average of 36 months follow-up, maximum 66 months.

Countries

Canada, United States

Participant flow

Participants by arm

ArmCount
ERN + Simvastatin
Extended release niacin plus simvastatin Extended release niacin: 2,000 mg/day or 1,500 mg/day if higher dose not tolerated Simvastatin: Dose adjusted to achieve LDL-C 40 mg/dL - 80 mg/dL, adding ezetimibe (10 mg/day) if needed to achieve LDL-C target
1,718
Placebo + Simvastatin
Simvastatin alone Simvastatin: Dose adjusted to achieve LDL-C 40 mg/dL - 80 mg/dL, adding ezetimibe (10 mg/day) if needed to achieve LDL-C target
1,696
Total3,414

Withdrawals & dropouts

PeriodReasonFG000FG001
Overall StudyDeath9682
Overall StudyLost to Follow-up1114
Overall StudyWithdrawal by Subject1413

Baseline characteristics

CharacteristicERN + SimvastatinTotalPlacebo + Simvastatin
Age, Categorical
<=18 years
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Age, Categorical
>=65 years
801 Participants1582 Participants781 Participants
Age, Categorical
Between 18 and 65 years
917 Participants1832 Participants915 Participants
Age, Continuous63.7 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 8.8
63.7 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 8.7
63.7 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 8.7
Clinical History
History of CABG
600 participants1227 participants627 participants
Clinical History
History of diabetes (Type 1 or 2)
588 participants1158 participants570 participants
Clinical History
History of myocardial infarction (MI)
968 participants1923 participants955 participants
Clinical History
History of Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
1057 participants2101 participants1044 participants
Clinical History
History of peripheral vascular disease
234 participants465 participants231 participants
Clinical History
History of stroke or cerebrovascular disease
358 participants720 participants362 participants
Clinical History
Metabolic syndrome
1414 participants2767 participants1353 participants
Concomitant Medications at Baseline
ACE inhibitor or Angiotensin Receptor Blocker
1258 participants2529 participants1271 participants
Concomitant Medications at Baseline
Aspirin or other antiplatelet or anticoagulant
1680 participants3334 participants1654 participants
Concomitant Medications at Baseline
Beta-blockers
1377 participants2719 participants1342 participants
Concomitant Medications at Baseline
Statins
1595 participants3196 participants1601 participants
Ethnicity (NIH/OMB)
Hispanic or Latino
63 Participants140 Participants77 Participants
Ethnicity (NIH/OMB)
Not Hispanic or Latino
1654 Participants3273 Participants1619 Participants
Ethnicity (NIH/OMB)
Unknown or Not Reported
1 Participants1 Participants0 Participants
Lipids and Lipoproteins at Baseline
Apolipoprotein A-I
122.4 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 16.2
123.1 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 16.2
123.7 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 16.3
Lipids and Lipoproteins at Baseline
Apolipoprotein B
83.2 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 20.2
83 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 20.4
82.9 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 20.7
Lipids and Lipoproteins at Baseline
HDL2-C
6 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 2.3
6.1 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 2.3
6.2 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 2.4
Lipids and Lipoproteins at Baseline
HDL3-C
28.5 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 4.2
28.6 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 4.1
28.7 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 4.1
Lipids and Lipoproteins at Baseline
HDL-C
34.5 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 5.6
34.7 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 5.6
34.9 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 5.6
Lipids and Lipoproteins at Baseline
LDL-C
74.2 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 23.4
74.1 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 23
74.0 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 22.7
Lipids and Lipoproteins at Baseline
Lipoprotein (a)
77.3 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 87.8
76.4 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 88.7
75.5 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 89.6
Lipids and Lipoproteins at Baseline
non-HDL cholesterol
110.8 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 27.5
110.6 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 26.8
110.3 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 26
Lipids and Lipoproteins at Baseline
Triglycerides
183.5 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 66.7
182.7 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 66.8
181.9 mg/dL
STANDARD_DEVIATION 66.9
Race (NIH/OMB)
American Indian or Alaska Native
11 Participants22 Participants11 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Asian
20 Participants41 Participants21 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Black or African American
68 Participants117 Participants49 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
More than one race
40 Participants73 Participants33 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
7 Participants12 Participants5 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Unknown or Not Reported
0 Participants1 Participants1 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
White
1572 Participants3148 Participants1576 Participants
Region of Enrollment
Canada
539 participants1068 participants529 participants
Region of Enrollment
United States
1179 participants2346 participants1167 participants
Sex: Female, Male
Female
253 Participants504 Participants251 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Male
1465 Participants2910 Participants1445 Participants

Adverse events

Event typeEG000
affected / at risk
EG001
affected / at risk
deaths
Total, all-cause mortality
— / —— / —
other
Total, other adverse events
1,413 / 1,7181,345 / 1,696
serious
Total, serious adverse events
587 / 1,718551 / 1,696

Outcome results

Primary

Composite End Point of CHD Death, Nonfatal MI, Ischemic Stroke, Hospitalization for Non-ST Segment Elevation Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), or Symptom-driven Coronary or Cerebral Revascularization

Time frame: Time to first event measured from date of randomization through last follow-up visit (common termination) for an average of 36 months follow-up, maximum 66 months.

Population: Intention-to-treat

ArmMeasureValue (NUMBER)
ERN + SimvastatinComposite End Point of CHD Death, Nonfatal MI, Ischemic Stroke, Hospitalization for Non-ST Segment Elevation Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), or Symptom-driven Coronary or Cerebral Revascularization282 participants
Placebo + SimvastatinComposite End Point of CHD Death, Nonfatal MI, Ischemic Stroke, Hospitalization for Non-ST Segment Elevation Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS), or Symptom-driven Coronary or Cerebral Revascularization274 participants
p-value: 0.895% CI: [0.87, 1.21]Regression, Cox
Secondary

Cardiovascular Mortality

Time frame: Time to first event measured from date of randomization through last follow-up visit (common termination), for an average of 36 months follow-up, maximum 66 months.

Population: Intention to treat

ArmMeasureValue (NUMBER)
ERN + SimvastatinCardiovascular Mortality45 participants
Placebo + SimvastatinCardiovascular Mortality38 participants
p-value: 0.4795% CI: [0.76, 1.8]Regression, Cox
Secondary

Composite Endpoint of CHD Death, Non-fatal MI, High-risk ACS or Ischemic Stroke

Time frame: Time to first event measured from date of randomization through last follow-up visit (common termination) for an average of 36 months follow-up, maximum 66 months

ArmMeasureValue (NUMBER)
ERN + SimvastatinComposite Endpoint of CHD Death, Non-fatal MI, High-risk ACS or Ischemic Stroke171 participants
Placebo + SimvastatinComposite Endpoint of CHD Death, Non-fatal MI, High-risk ACS or Ischemic Stroke158 participants
p-value: 0.4995% CI: [0.87, 1.34]Regression, Cox
Secondary

Composite Endpoint of CHD Death, Non-fatal MI, or Ischemic Stroke

Time frame: Time to first event measured from date of randomization through last follow-up visit (common termination) for an average of 36 months follow-up, maximum 66 months

Population: Intention to treat

ArmMeasureValue (NUMBER)
ERN + SimvastatinComposite Endpoint of CHD Death, Non-fatal MI, or Ischemic Stroke156 participants
Placebo + SimvastatinComposite Endpoint of CHD Death, Non-fatal MI, or Ischemic Stroke138 participants
p-value: 0.395% CI: [0.9, 1.42]Regression, Cox

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 27, 2026