FDA approves wider Crestor use for cardiovascular disease
FDA approves wider Crestor use for cardiovascular disease
20:53, February 09, 2010

Email | Print | Subscribe | Comments | Forum 
The Food and Drug Administration of the United States has approved wider use of Crestor, the AstraZeneca PLC's cholesterol-lowering drug, allowing the company to market the drug to patients who don't have signs of heart disease.
FDA's approval broadens the indication for Crestor as a preventative measure for cardiovascular disease.
The approval was based on a AstraZeneca-sponsored study of almost 18,000 patients known as "Jupiter," which looked at patients whose cholesterol levels were normal or slightly elevated but who had an elevated C-reactive protein (CRP) level.
CRP is a key indicator of inflammation that can lead to clogged arteries, causing heart attack or stroke.
The Jupiter study, which compared patients on Crestor with patients receiving a placebo, looked at events such as death, stroke, heart attacks, hospitalization for heart problems and surgery to treat clogged arteries; patients on Crestor showed a 44 percent reduction in the number of events after an average of 1.9 years.
Scientists are still unsure whether the positive results were due to lower cholesterol or C-reactive protein, since Crestor reduces both.
Under the new language, Crestor is approved for men 50 and older, and women 60 and older who have elevated C-reactive protein. Patients must also have at least one risk factor for heart trouble, such as high blood pressure or a smoking habit.
Source: Xinhua
FDA's approval broadens the indication for Crestor as a preventative measure for cardiovascular disease.
The approval was based on a AstraZeneca-sponsored study of almost 18,000 patients known as "Jupiter," which looked at patients whose cholesterol levels were normal or slightly elevated but who had an elevated C-reactive protein (CRP) level.
CRP is a key indicator of inflammation that can lead to clogged arteries, causing heart attack or stroke.
The Jupiter study, which compared patients on Crestor with patients receiving a placebo, looked at events such as death, stroke, heart attacks, hospitalization for heart problems and surgery to treat clogged arteries; patients on Crestor showed a 44 percent reduction in the number of events after an average of 1.9 years.
Scientists are still unsure whether the positive results were due to lower cholesterol or C-reactive protein, since Crestor reduces both.
Under the new language, Crestor is approved for men 50 and older, and women 60 and older who have elevated C-reactive protein. Patients must also have at least one risk factor for heart trouble, such as high blood pressure or a smoking habit.
Source: Xinhua

Related Reading

Special Coverage
Major headlines
Chinese premier urges greater Sino-Japanese cooperation to boost mutual understanding, trust
Chinese vice president urges further study of scientific development theory
Senior leader urges artists, writers to work for cultural prosperity
Senior leader urges religious believers to help promote development, stability
A humanitarian mission to spread love: Chinese medical team in Haiti
Editor's Pick

Most Popular

Hot Forum Dicussion










