Effects of ramipril and vitamin E on atherosclerosis: the study to evaluate carotid ultrasound changes in patients treated with ramipril and vitamin E (SECURE)

EM Lonn, S Yusuf, V Dzavik, CI Doris, Q Yi, S Smith… - Circulation, 2001 - Am Heart Assoc
EM Lonn, S Yusuf, V Dzavik, CI Doris, Q Yi, S Smith, A Moore-Cox, J Bosch, WA Riley…
Circulation, 2001Am Heart Assoc
Background—Activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and oxidative
modification of LDL cholesterol play important roles in atherosclerosis. The Study to
Evaluate Carotid Ultrasound changes in patients treated with Ramipril and vitamin E
(SECURE), a substudy of the Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation (HOPE) trial, was a
prospective, double-blind, 3× 2 factorial design trial that evaluated the effects of long-term
treatment with the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor ramipril and vitamin E on …
Background—Activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and oxidative modification of LDL cholesterol play important roles in atherosclerosis. The Study to Evaluate Carotid Ultrasound changes in patients treated with Ramipril and vitamin E (SECURE), a substudy of the Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation (HOPE) trial, was a prospective, double-blind, 3×2 factorial design trial that evaluated the effects of long-term treatment with the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor ramipril and vitamin E on atherosclerosis progression in high-risk patients.
Methods and Results—A total of 732 patients ≥55 years of age who had vascular disease or diabetes and at least one other risk factor and who did not have heart failure or a low left ventricular ejection fraction were randomly assigned to receive ramipril 2.5 mg/d or 10 mg/d and vitamin E (RRR-α-tocopheryl acetate) 400 IU/d or their matching placebos. Average follow-up was 4.5 years. Atherosclerosis progression was evaluated by B-mode carotid ultrasound. The progression slope of the mean maximum carotid intimal medial thickness was 0.0217 mm/year in the placebo group, 0.0180 mm/year in the ramipril 2.5 mg/d group, and 0.0137 mm/year in the ramipril 10 mg/d group (P=0.033). There were no differences in atherosclerosis progression rates between patients on vitamin E and those on placebo.
Conclusions—Long-term treatment with ramipril had a beneficial effect on atherosclerosis progression. Vitamin E had a neutral effect on atherosclerosis progression.
Am Heart Assoc