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Statin Therapy In Atrial Refractoriness and Reperfusion Injury (STARR)

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University of Oxford

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Atrial Fibrillation
Cardiac Insufficiency Following Cardiac Surgery
Disorder; Heart, Functional, Postoperative, Cardiac Surgery
Ischaemia-reperfusion Injury

Treatments

Drug: Placebo
Drug: Atorvastatin

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01780740
2009-013228-21 (EudraCT Number)
10/H0505/35

Details and patient eligibility

About

Patients with coronary artery disease are often prescribed drugs called statins because research has shown that, by lowering cholesterol, they reduce the risk of having a heart attack or other complications in the long-term. Experimental studies have suggested that statins may also have rapid anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant and anti arrhythmic actions; however, whether these effects are of any benefit to patients remains to be proven. The purpose of STARR trial (Statin Therapy in Atrial Refractoriness and Reperfusion injury) is to evaluate whether a short course of a commonly used statin (atorvastatin, 80 mg once a day) decreases inflammation and stabilises electrical properties of the upper chamber of the heart in the post operative period of patients undergoing cardiac surgery on the heart-lung machine either for valve replacement and/or coronary artery bypass grafting. It will also examine whether this treatment can protect the heart from sustaining tissue damage when blood supply is restored after a period of ischaemia during the course of the surgery.In addition it will also explore the impact of this intervention on biology of the vessels used for bypass surgery and the fat tissue in the vicinity of the heart & blood vessels.

Full description

Evidence that pre- or perioperative statin treatment may reduce the occurrence of post-operative atrial fibrillation and improve clinical outcome in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) or major vascular surgery has been largely generated by observational studies. In a recent meta-analysis of 6 randomized trials (of which only 2 had postoperative atrial fibrillation (AF) as a predefined outcome) evaluating the use of perioperative statin treatment in patients undergoing cardiac surgery (n=651 patients in total - study size between 40 and 200 patients), statin use was found to reduce the patients' relative risk of developing postoperative AF by 43% (RR 0.57, 95%CI 0.45,0.72) and their absolute risk by 14% (95% CI 8%,20%). Although these findings would be consistent with a rapid and, possibly, lipid-independent antiarrhythmic effect of statins, they have important limitations (e.g., single-centre, small size, lack of continuous ECG monitoring, mostly "ancillary" findings") and less bearing on current clinical practice, as they mostly included statin-naïve patients. For these reasons, the recent guidelines for the management of AF have not given a strong recommendation for the use of statins in the prevention of postoperative AF. Thus, whether intensive statin treatment in the perioperative period can confer cardio protection by reduction of atrial oxidative stress & improvement in atrial electrical remodelling remains to be demonstrated.As endothelial function is a strong determinant of clinical outcomes, improvement of vascular redox state & increase in nitric oxide bioavailability of arterial & venous grafts of patients undergoing cardiac surgery may improve post operative outcomes.However it is still unclear whether higher doses of atorvastatin could confer additional beneficial effects on human vessels. Adipose tissue (AT) by releasing vasoactive molecules & adipokines can affect myocardial and vascular biology. Recent evidence suggests that statins may favourably alter AT biosynthetic activity and increase the AT release of adiponectin (An adipokine that has been shown to have anti-inflammatory and anti-atherogenic effects) in turn improving the vascular & myocardial redox state. However there are only limited data on the effects of statins on human adipose tissue biology and most findings to date are based on cell lines and/or relevant mouse models.

Enrollment

80 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Participant is willing and able to give informed consent for participation in the study.
  • Male or Female, aged 18 years or above.
  • Requiring elective cardiac surgery.
  • Able (in the Investigators' opinion) and willing to comply with all study requirements.
  • Willing to allow his or her General Practitioner and consultant, if appropriate, to be notified of participation in the study.

Exclusion criteria

  • Age>85yrs
  • Female participant who is pregnant, lactating or planning pregnancy during the course of the study.
  • Women of child-bearing potential without appropriate contraceptive measures. These include oral contraceptive pills, Intrauterine contraceptive devices etc
  • History of obstructive hepatobiliary disease or other serious hepatic disease or pre-operative ALT >2-fold the upper limit of normal or alcohol abuse
  • Creatinine >200 umol/L
  • Untreated hypothyroidism
  • Family history of hereditary muscle disorders
  • Known intolerance to statins or history of muscle toxicity with fibrates or statins.
  • Ongoing use of fibrates, niacin or of agents that are strong inhibitors of cytochrome P-450 or the P-glycoprotein within a month preceding randomization (cyclosporine, azole antifungals, such as itraconazole and ketoconazole, macrolide antibiotics, such as erythromycin and clarithromycin, protease inhibitors, nefazodone, verapamil, amiodarone or large quantity of grapefruit juice (≥ 1L/day) Patients on treatment with anti arrhythmic agents, other than beta-adrenergic receptor blockers.
  • Participant who is terminally ill or is inappropriate for placebo medication.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

80 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Atorvastatin
Experimental group
Description:
Atorvastatin (80 mg od) started not earlier than 6 days before surgery and continued until the 5th post-operative day included;
Treatment:
Drug: Atorvastatin
Sugar pill
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Placebo started not earlier than 6 days before surgery and continued until the 5th post-operative day included.
Treatment:
Drug: Placebo

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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