@article{b3574882c2484804b08f2e53f7c99204,
title = "Rationale and design of randomized evaluation of aggressive or moderate lipid lowering therapy with pitavastatin in coronary artery disease (REAL-CAD) trial",
abstract = "Large-scale clinical trials in patients in Western countries with coronary artery disease (CAD) have found that aggressive lipid-lowering therapy using high-dose statins reduces cardiovascular (CV) events further than low-dose statins. However such evidence has not yet been fully established in Asian populations including in Japan. The Randomized Evaluation of Aggressive or Moderate Lipid-Lowering Therapy with Pitavastatin in Coronary Artery Disease (REAL-CAD) study addresses whether intensification of statin therapy improves clinical outcomes in Japanese patients with CAD. REAL-CAD is a prospective multicenter randomized open-label blinded-endpoint physician-initiated phase 4 trial in Japan. The study will recruit up to 12,600 patients with stable CAD. Patients are assigned to receive either pitavastatin 1 mg/day or pitavastatin 4 mg/day. LDL-C levels are expected to reach approximate mean values of 100 mg/dL in the low-dose pitavastatin group 80 mg/dL in the high-dose group. The primary endpoint is the time to occurrence of a major CV event including CV death non-fatal myocardial infarction non-fatal ischemic strokeunstable angina requiring emergency hospitalization during an average of 5 years. The large number of patients the long follow-up period in the REAL-CAD study should ensure that there is adequate power to definitively determine if reducing LDL-C levels to approximately 80 mg/dL by high-dose statin can provide additional clinical benefit. After the study is completed we will have categorical evidence on the optimal statin dose target LDL-C level for secondary prevention in Japanese patients.",
keywords = "Cardiovascular events, High-dose statin therapy, LDL cholesterol, Long-term outcomes, Myocardial infarction, Secondary prevention, Stroke, Unstable angina",
author = "{REAL-CAD Trial Investigaters} and Katsumi Miyauchi and Takeshi Kimura and Hiroaki Shimokawa and Hiroyuki Daida and Satoshi Iimuro and Hiroshi Iwata and Yukio Ozaki and Ichiro Sakuma and Yoshihisa Nakagawa and Kiyoshi Hibi and Takafumi Hiro and Yoshihiro Fukumoto and Seiji Hokimoto and Yasuo Ohashi and Hiroshi Ohtsu and Yasushi Saito and Masunori Matsuzaki and Ryozo Nagai",
note = "Funding Information: From the 1Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine, Tokyo, 2Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoko, 3Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, Miyagi, 4Teikyo Academic Research Center, Teikyo University, Tokyo, 5Department of Cardiology, Fujita Health University Hospital, Fujita Health University School of Medicine, Aichi, 6Caress Sapporo Hokko Memorial Clinic, Hokkaido, 7Department of Cardiology, Tenri Hospital, Nara, 8Division of Cardiology, Yokohama City University Medical Center, Kanagawa, 9Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Nihon University School of Medicine, Tokyo, 10Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Kurume University School of Medicine, Fukuoka, 11Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Kumamoto University Hospital, Kumamoto, 12Department of Integrated Science and Technology for Sustainable Society, Chuo University, Tokyo, 13National Center for Global Health and Medicine, Center for Clinical Sciences, Tokyo, 14Chiba University, Chiba, 15St. Hill Hospital, Yamaguchi and 16Jichi Medical University, Tochigi, Japan. This study is supported by the Comprehensive Support Project for Clinical Research of Lifestyle-Related Disease of the Public Health Research Foundation (PHRF). The company manufacturing the study drug (Kowa Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.) was one of the entities providing financial support for the project of PHRF. Address for correspondence: Katsumi Miyauchi, MD, Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Juntendo University, 2-1-1, Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, 113-8421, Japan. E-mail: ktmmy@juntendo.ac.jp Received for publication September 28, 2017. Revised and accepted December 1, 2017. Released in advance online on J-STAGE March 5, 2018. doi: 10.1536/ihj.17-557 All rights reserved by the International Heart Journal Association. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2018, International Heart Journal Association. All rights reserved.",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1536/ihj.17-557",
language = "English",
volume = "59",
pages = "315--320",
journal = "International Heart Journal",
issn = "1349-2365",
publisher = "International Heart Journal Association",
number = "2",
}