Background: It has been suggested that intensive lipid-lowering therapy using statins significantly decreases atheromatous plaque volume. The effect of rosuvastatin on plaque volume in patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD), including those receiving prior lipid-lowering therapy, was examined in the present study. Methods and Results: A 76-week open-label trial was performed at 37 centers in Japan. Eligible patients began treatment with rosuvastatin 2.5 mg/day, which could be increased at 4-week intervals to ≤20 mg/day. A total of 214 patients underwent intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) at baseline; 126 patients had analyzable IVUS images at the end of the study. The change in the serum low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol level from baseline to end of follow-up was -38.6±16.9%, whereas that of high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol was +19.8±22.9% (both P<0.0001). Percent change of plaque volume, the primary endpoint, was -5.1±14.1% (P<0.0001). Conclusions: Rosuvastatin exerted significant regression of coronary plaque volume in Japanese patients with stable CAD, including those who had previously used other lipid-lowering drugs. Rosuvastatin might be useful in the setting of secondary prevention in patients with stable CAD.
CITATION STYLE
Takayama, T., Hiro, T., Yamagishi, M., Daida, H., Hirayama, A., Saito, S., … Matsuzaki, M. (2009). Effect of rosuvastatin on coronary atheroma in stable coronary artery disease - Multicenter Coronary Atherosclerosis Study Measuring Effects of Rosuvastatin Using Intravascular Ultrasound in Japanese Subjects (COSMOS). Circulation Journal, 73(11), 2110–2117. https://doi.org/10.1253/circj.CJ-09-0358
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