Pfizer's Lipitor for 5 new indications in patients with heart disease
Heart disease is a general term that relates to many heart conditions. Coronary artery disease is the most common form of heart disease. It occurs when the arteries that carry blood to the heart muscle are narrowed or blocked. This can lead to angina or heart attack.
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Pfizer's Lipitor for 5 new indications in patients with heart disease

Heart Disease :: Pfizer's Lipitor for 5 new indications in patients with heart disease

Heart Disease :: Pfizer's Lipitor for 5 new indications in patients with heart disease

Pfizer announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Lipitor? (atorvastatin calcium) Tablets to reduce the risk of nonfatal heart attacks, fatal and non-fatal strokes, certain types of heart surgery, hospitalization for heart failure, and chest pain in patients with heart disease.

Lipitor is the first cholesterol-lowering medication to receive FDA approval for the reduction of the risk of hospitalization for heart failure.

This new approval expands the use of Lipitor to patients at high risk for cardiovascular events because of established heart disease such as prior heart attack, prior heart surgery, or chest pain with evidence of clogged arteries. Previously, Lipitor was approved to reduce cardiovascular events in patients without heart disease.

"These new indications are important since many patients who have heart disease remain at risk for another cardiovascular event, and now these indications broaden the means to reduce their risk," said Dr. John C. LaRosa, president and professor of medicine at the State University of New York Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn, N.Y. and lead investigator for the Treating to New Targets (TNT) trial. "The significant reduction in cardiovascular events seen in the TNT trial can now be applied to everyday practice and benefit people with heart disease in the United States."

The approval is based on results from the landmark TNT trial and supported by findings from the Incremental Decrease in Endpoints through Aggressive Lipid Lowering (IDEAL) trial. The results of these two trials were important enough to be referenced in updated treatment guidelines issued jointly by the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology in 2006.

(Published at www.spiritindia.com on Thursday, March 8, 2007)
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