Beneficial effect of early initiation of lipid-lowering therapy following renal transplantation

2005 
Background. Renal transplant recipients have a significantly reduced life expectancy, largely due to premature cardiovascular disease. The aim of the current analysis was to investigate the importance of time of initiation of therapy after transplantation, on the benefits of statin therapy. Methods. 2102 renal transplant recipients with total cholesterol levels of 4.0–9.0 mmol/l were randomly assigned to treatment with fluvastatin (n ¼ 1050) or placebo (n ¼ 1052) and followed for a mean time of 5.1 years. The end-points were major cardiac events. The average median time from transplantation to randomization was 4.5 years (range: 0.5–29 years). Results. In patients starting treatment with fluvastatin 6 years, respectively. The risk reduction for patients initiating therapy with fluvastatin at years 0–2 (compared with >6 years) following transplantation was 59% (RR: 0.41; 95% CI: 0.18–0.92; P ¼ 0.0328). This is also reflected in total time on renal replacement therapy: in patients in the first quartile ( 120 months) (P ¼ 0.033). Conclusions. Our data support an early introduction of fluvastatin therapy in a population of transplant recipients at high risk of premature coronary heart disease.
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