Overall mortality, incremental life expectancy, and cause of death at 25 years in the program on the surgical control of the hyperlipidemias

H Buchwald, KD Rudser, SE Williams, VN Michalek… - 2010 - journals.lww.com
H Buchwald, KD Rudser, SE Williams, VN Michalek, J Vagasky, JE Connett
2010journals.lww.com
Objective: To present the longest follow-up report of any lipid-atherosclerosis intervention
trial. Summary of Background Data: The Program on the Surgical Control of the
Hyperlipidemias (POSCH), a secondary, clinical/arteriographic, randomized controlled trial,
was the first lipid-atherosclerosis trial to demonstrate unequivocally that low density
lipoprotein cholesterol reduction reduced the incidence of coronary heart disease death and
myocardial infarction. Methods: We report POSCH 25 years follow-up for overall mortality …
Objective:
To present the longest follow-up report of any lipid-atherosclerosis intervention trial.
Summary of Background Data:
The Program on the Surgical Control of the Hyperlipidemias (POSCH), a secondary, clinical/arteriographic, randomized controlled trial, was the first lipid-atherosclerosis trial to demonstrate unequivocally that low density lipoprotein cholesterol reduction reduced the incidence of coronary heart disease death and myocardial infarction.
Methods:
We report POSCH 25 years follow-up for overall mortality, specific cause of death, and certain subgroup analyses, as well as a prediction for increase in life expectancy derived from the POSCH database, supplemented by the 2006 National Death Index, 1989–2006.
Results:
There were 838 patients randomized in POSCH (421 surgery, 417 control). At 25 years follow-up, the difference in the restricted mean survival and the logrank (Mantel-Haenszel) statistic was statistically significant, with survival probabilities of 0.57 (surgery) and 0.51 (controls). Cause of death data indicated a significant increase in cardiovascular deaths in the control group; cancer deaths were also greater in the control group but this was not significant. The most compelling subgroup analysis was a significant increase in survival, starting at 5 years after randomization, in the surgery group for patients with an ejection fraction≥ 50%, with relative probabilities of 0.61 (surgery) and 0.51 (control). The estimated incremental increase in life expectancy over more than 25 years of follow-up was 1.0 year overall and 1.7 years in the cohort with an ejection fraction≥ 50%.
Conclusions:
A 25-year mortality follow-up in POSCH shows statistically significant gains in overall survival, cardiovascular disease-free survival, and life expectancy in the surgery group compared with the control group.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins