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Published in: Cardiovascular Diabetology 1/2016

Open Access 01-12-2016 | Original investigation

Bezafibrate for the treatment of dyslipidemia in patients with coronary artery disease: 20-year mortality follow-up of the BIP randomized control trial

Authors: Yaron Arbel, Robert Klempfner, Aharon Erez, Ilan Goldenberg, Sagit Benzekry, Nir Shlomo, Enrique Z. Fisman, Alexander Tenenbaum, for the BIP Study Group

Published in: Cardiovascular Diabetology | Issue 1/2016

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Abstract

Background

Recent data support the renewed interest in hypertriglyceridemia as a possible important therapeutic target for cardiovascular risk reduction. This study was designed to address the question of all-cause mortality during extended follow-up of the BIP trial in patients stratified by baseline triglyceride levels.

Methods

In the BIP trial 3090 patients with proven coronary artery disease were randomized to bezafibrate 400 mg/day or placebo. All-cause mortality data after 20 years of follow-up, were obtained from the National Israeli Population Registry. Patients with hypertriglyceridemia (triglycerides ≥200 mg/dL, n = 458) were equally distributed among the study groups (15 % in both placebo and bezafibrate groups).

Results

During follow-up 1869 patients died (952 in placebo vs. 917 in bezafibrate group). Following multivariate adjustment allocation to bezafibrate was associated with small but significant 10 % mortality risk reduction (HR 0.90; 95 % CI 0.82–0.98, p = 0.026). Variables associated with significantly increased mortality risk were history of a past MI, NYHA class, diabetes, age, higher BMI and glucose level. In patients with hypertriglyceridemia multivariate analysis demonstrated a 25 % all-cause mortality risk reduction associated with allocation to bezafibrate (HR 0.75, CI 95 % 0.60–0.94; p = 0.012). In patients without hypertriglyceridemia bezafibrate had no significant effect on long-term mortality.

Conclusions

During long-term follow-up bezafibrate-allocated patients experienced a modest but significant 10 % reduction in the adjusted risk of mortality. This effect of bezafibrate was more prominent among patients with baseline hypertriglyceridemia (25 % mortality risk reduction).
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Metadata
Title
Bezafibrate for the treatment of dyslipidemia in patients with coronary artery disease: 20-year mortality follow-up of the BIP randomized control trial
Authors
Yaron Arbel
Robert Klempfner
Aharon Erez
Ilan Goldenberg
Sagit Benzekry
Nir Shlomo
Enrique Z. Fisman
Alexander Tenenbaum
for the BIP Study Group
Publication date
01-12-2016
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Cardiovascular Diabetology / Issue 1/2016
Electronic ISSN: 1475-2840
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12933-016-0332-6

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