More articles from Interpreting Key Trials
- TheDASHdiet for high blood pressure: From clinical trial to dinner table
Eating right lowers blood pressure by about as much as any single antihypertensive drug—but will patients do it?
- Lessons from the PROVE-IT Trial
Patients with acute coronary syndromes should receive aggressive lipid-lowering therapy with a statin in high doses. Goal low-density lipoprotein levels may need to be lower.
- Angiotensin-receptor blockers in heart failure
The ARB candesartan was not only a good alternative to an ACE inhibitor, it was beneficial when added to a regimen that already included an ACE inhibitor and a beta-blocker.
- ALLHAT says diuretics are better; ANBP2 says ACEs are better—Can we resolve the differences?
Two major clinical trials apparently differed about which class of drugs is best for high blood pressure. Or did they?
- Interpreting the COMET trial
Although survival was better with carvedilol than with immediate-release metoprolol tartrate, we must increase the use of any approved beta-blocker in heart failure.
- The Heart Protection Study: High-risk patients benefit from statins, regardless of LDL-C level
Nearly all patients at high risk of a coronary event should be taking a statin drug, regardless of their low-density lipoprotein level. We explain the rationale, design, findings, and implications of this important study.
- In refractory temporal lobe epilepsy, consider surgery sooner
Epilepsy surgery is perhaps the most underused therapy in all of medicine today.
- The Lescol Intervention Prevention Study (Lips)
The trial showed a significant reduction in cardiac events in patients who received a statin drug immediately after a successful percutaneous coronary intervention. Currently, this is seldom done.
- Atrial fibrillation: Rate control is as good as rhythm control for some, but not all
Many clinicians are questioning the need to restore or maintain sinus rhythm in atrial fibrillation. What did four recent trials show ?
- A Perspective on the study of Moseley et al
A provocative study suggests that arthroscopy for osteoarthritis of the knee provides subjective pain relief via a placebo effect.