Amigos, uma notícia bem interessante. Recomendo para quem
não é fluente em Inglês, usar a tradução do google.
SvH
Robert W
Malone MD, MS
May 6 · Who
is Robert Malone
https://rwmalonemd.substack.com/
My friend
and colleague, Dr. Maryanne Demasi has been studying the use of statins for
years. She just had her meta analysis published in "JAMA Internal
Medicine." This is an extremely important paper.
The paper's
meta-analysis/review of "21 statin trials involving 143,532 participants,
using similar criteria to the CTT, and found no consistent relationship between
lowering LDL-C with statins and death, heart attack or stroke."
There you
have it folks.
This paper
was published in March, 2023 and main stream media has yet to report on these
results.
Could it be
that the media receiving billions of dollars from big pharma in revenue for
advertising statin drugs has anything to do with that?
New
analysis shows statins have "minimal" benefits
MARYANNE
DEMASI, PHD
MAY 6
By Maryanne
Demasi, PhD
The public
health mantra about cholesterol has always been “the lower, the better.”
This has
been reflected in expert guidelines which have called on doctors to
aggressively lower their patient’s ‘bad’ LDL-cholesterol (LDL-C) with statin
drugs to prevent heart disease.
However,
our new analysis published in JAMA Internal Medicine (paywalled) challenges
that notion.
Over the
years, influential researchers such as the Cholesterol Treatment Trialists
(CTT) at Oxford University, have monopolised the scientific debate on statins.
They have
stated that for every 1mmol/L reduction in LDL-C, there is a 21% relative risk
reduction in cardiovascular events.
But there
are three problems with the various CTT analyses:
1. The CTT
researchers have acquired all the individual patient data (raw data) from
published trials and will not share them with other researchers, thus
preventing independent replication of their results. For this reason, our study
used published trial data only.
2. The CTT
promotes the view that statins can reduce “cardiovascular events” which is a
composite endpoint with inherent problems. It combines objective outcomes such
as death, heart attack and stroke (hard endpoints), together with subjective
outcomes such as hospital admissions or revascularisations (soft endpoints).
The soft endpoints are often based on a doctor’s ‘judgement call’ and therefore
subject to bias. In some analyses, these can make up the majority of events so
they can skew the overall result towards benefits for the less serious
cardiovascular outcomes. To avoid this, we restricted our analysis to hard endpoints
only (death, heart attack and stroke), making it less prone to bias.
3. The CTT
and public health authorities often promote the benefits of statins in terms of
a relative risk reduction (RRR), rather than an absolute risk reduction (ARR).
The RRR is a more impressive statistic (demonstrated below) and can mislead the
patient into believe the benefits are larger than they are. Therefore, our
study reported both the RRR and ARR of statins on cardiovascular outcomes.
What did
our analysis find?
We carried
out a systematic review and meta-analysis of 21 statin trials involving 143,532
participants, using similar criteria to the CTT, and found no consistent
relationship between lowering LDL-C with statins and death, heart attack or
stroke.
Statins are
very effective at lowering LDL-C, but in some trials, that did not necessarily
translate into a meaningful benefit for the patient.
This
contradicts the prevailing view, promoted by the CTT, that there is a strong
“linear” relationship between lowering LDL-C and cardiovascular outcomes from
statin therapy.
Our
analysis also highlighted the significant difference in the relative risk
reduction (RRR) and absolute risk reduction (ARR) of statin therapy on death,
heart attack and stroke.
For
example, if your baseline risk of having a heart attack is 2% and taking a drug
reduces that risk to 1%, then in relative terms you halved your risk (50% RRR)
which sounds impressive, but in absolute terms, you have only reduced your risk
by 1% (ARR).
Our
analysis showed that trial participants taking a statin for an average of 4.4
years, showed a 29% RRR in heart attacks, but the ARR was only 1.3%.
If this is
not effectively communicated to a patient, can they make a fully informed decision
about their treatment?
It may also
influence their calculated benefit:harm ratio if the patient is experiencing
debilitating effects from the medication.
The graph
shows just how deceptive it can be when patients are only told about the
benefits of statins in terms of RRR (light blue bars) without the ARR (dark
blue bars).
Reporting
RRR without baseline risk has been described by experts in risk communication
as “the first sin against transparent reporting”.
Selectively
reporting the RRR is likely to lead individuals to overestimate the benefit of
the drug, it can increases people’s willingness to receive a treatment, advise
treatment, and pay to prevent the risk compared with ARR or other methods for
communicating risk.
Our
analysis combined all statin trials, as well as separated them on the basis of
primary prevention (low risk) and secondary prevention (high risk) trials.
The maximum
benefit of a statin over the trial period was achieved in people whose risk of
heart attack was already very high (secondary prevention); i.e. there was a
2.2% ARR in heart attacks and a 0.9% ARR in deaths in high risk patients.
Remembering
too, the vast majority of these trials were sponsored by statin manufacturers,
as well as written, designed and analysed by researchers with ties to statin
manufacturers.
Some have
argued that the benefits may seem minimal in the first few years, but that the
benefits may continue to accumulate over the life of the patient - often
overlooking that the harms may also accumulate.
Bottom
line:
JAMA
Internal Medicine has published our new systematic review and meta-analysis on
21 statin trials involving 143,532 participants.
Despite the
widespread view promoted by public health, our new study found no consistent
relationship between lowering LDL-C and death, heart attack or stroke,
following statin therapy.
Doctors are
not effectively and transparently communicating cardiovascular risk to their
patients, thereby not allowing informed decision-making.
We
concluded that the benefits of statins were minimal, and most of the trial
participants who took statins, derived no clinical benefit.
Independent
medical journalism
© 2023 Robert W Malone, MD
Virginia
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