The authors of two BMJ posts have withdrawn statements about the adverse results of statins. The two papers inaccurately cite an earlier publication and for that reason overstate the incidence of adverse effects of statins. As a outcome, the two papers have drawn significantly criticism and set off a kerfuffle involving the editor of BMJ and a prominent British trialist who is demanding a complete retraction of the articles or blog posts. But the controversy almost certainly won’t be resolved any time soon, since an independent panel, which will be asked to choose the issue, is nonetheless in the approach of being assembled.
In an editorial published in BMJ, the journal’s editor-in-chief, Fiona Godlee, explains the cause for the corrections and the lingering controversy. In October 2013 the BMJ published two posts which cited the same examine by Zhang and colleagues to assistance the statement that statin side results take place in 18-twenty% of sufferers. The 1st article, by Abramson and colleagues, reanalyzed data from the Cholesterol Treatment Trialists’ (CTT) Collaboration. The 2nd article, by Aseem Malhotra, questioned the part of saturated unwanted fat in heart disease. But, writes Godlee, the articles “did not reflect required caveats and did not take ample account of the uncontrolled nature” of the information in the paper.
The aim of the editorial, she writes, is “to alert readers, the media, and the public to the withdrawal of these statements so that individuals who could benefit from statins are not wrongly deterred from beginning or continuing treatment method simply because of exaggerated considerations above side effects.”
Following the initial publication of the two BMJ articles, the head of the CTT Collaboration, Rory Collins, contacted Godlee on several occasions to express his concerns about the papers, however he declined requests to respond in BMJ. The BMJ editors agreed with the authors of the two research on the wording of a published correction (see below), but Collins still desired a complete retraction. Godlee reports that she is uncertain “whether the error is ample for retraction, given that the incorrect statements were in every single situation secondary to the article’s principal emphasis.” As a consequence the BMJ has convened an outdoors panel of authorities “with no puppy in this fight.”
Right here is the complete wording of the two corrections:
Need to people at low threat of cardiovascular ailment consider a statin?
The conclusion and summary box of this Examination write-up by Abramson and colleagues (BMJ 2013347:f6123, doi:10.1136/bmj.f6123) stated that side results of statins occur in about 18-20% of patients. The authors withdraw this statement. Though it was primarily based on statements in the referenced observational study by Zhang and colleagues, that “the fee of reported statin-connected events to statins was almost 18%,”(1) the article did not reflect needed caveats and did not consider ample account of the uncontrolled nature of the examine.
Zhang et al observed that the rate of statin associated events identified in their study (18%) was “substantially greater than the five% to 10% normally described in randomized, placebo-managed, clinical trials.” Two caveats have to be considered. As Zhang et al point out, the charge of statin associated occasions reported in their examine was uncontrolled and therefore may possibly be inflated because events attributed to statins may possibly have occurred in a placebo group as well. In addition, though Zhang et al do not make this stage, the five-10% price quoted by Zhang et al as getting been observed in randomised trials was, in numerous cases, equivalent in the two lively and placebo groups.
The precise price of statin related adverse occasions in men and women at minimal chance of cardiovascular condition stays uncertain. Clinical trials could underestimate the frequency of statin connected adverse events because of patient choice, exclusion of older sufferers and those with comorbid circumstances or prospective drug interactions, beneath-representation of women, and assortment bias produced by willingness to participate in a clinical trial. In addition, when in contrast with the complete clinical study reports, published accounts of clinical trials in healthcare journals report only a minority of adverse occasions.(2) Access to the full information from the trials of statins would assist to decide the comparative costs of significant adverse occasions in statin and control groups but probably would not assist to establish the frequency of significantly less than serious adverse occasions.
The authors also mistakenly reported that Zhang et al identified that “18% of statin taken care of patients had discontinued treatment (at least temporarily) simply because of statin associated occasions.” The right interpretation of the information, as confirmed to The BMJ by Zhang et al, is as follows. Primarily based on overview of structured electronic health-related record categories and automated overview of unstructured narratives from stick to-up visits of 107<thin>835 sufferers above eight many years, 18<thin>778 of all review patients (17.four%) had a statin connected event documented in the course of the study. Amid those who skilled a statin related occasion, only 59.2% had statin therapy discontinued at least temporarily. Even so, since of feasible miscategorisation resulting from the constrained options in the electronic healthcare record for recording causes for discontinuation of statin treatment, Zhang et al concluded that “as numerous as 87%” of these discontinuations could have been due to statin-related events. This equates to up to 9% of the review population obtaining possibly discontinued statin therapy as a consequence of statin relevant occasions, rather than the 18% cited.
The principal obtaining of Abramson and colleague’s article—that the Cholesterol Therapy Trialists’ information failed to present that statins reduced the overall danger of mortality amongst individuals with <20% danger of cardiovascular condition in excess of the up coming ten years—was not challenged in the process of communication about this correction.
1 Zhang H, Plutzky J, Skentzos S, Morrison F, Mar P, Shubina M, et al. Discontinuation of statins in program care settings. Ann Intern Med 2013158:526-34.
2 Wieseler B, Wolfram N, McGauran N, Kerekes MF, Vervolgyi V, et al. Completeness of reporting of patient-relevant clinical trial outcomes: comparison of unpublished clinical examine reviews with publicly offered data. PLoS Med 201310:e1001526 .
Cite this as: BMJ 2014348:g3329
Saturated excess fat is not the key issue
This Observations report (BMJ 2013347:f6340, doi:10.1136/bmj.f6340) by Aseem Malhotra stated that a current “real world” research of 150<thin>000 patients who were taking statins showed “unacceptable” side effects—including myalgia, gastrointestinal upset, rest and memory disturbance, and erectile dysfunction—in 20% of participants. The author withdraws this statement. Though it was based on statements in the referenced observational study by Zhang and colleagues that “the fee of reported statin-related occasions to statins was virtually 18%,” (1) the article did not reflect necessary caveats and did not consider ample account of the uncontrolled nature of the review.
BMJ Content articles Essential Of Statins Provoke Kerfuffle
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder