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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2013 Aug 12.
Published in final edited form as: Drugs Aging. 2009;26(3):209–230. doi: 10.2165/00002512-200926030-00003

Table III.

Clinical trials relevant to the secondary prevention of stroke at any age, or prevention of stroke in the oldest patients with cardiovascular risk factor modification

Name Population Treatment Key clinical findings
Hypertension
PROGRESS[17] 6105 hypertensive and non-hypertensive patients with a history of stroke of any cause or TIA (mean age 64 years; SD 10 years) β-Adrenoceptor antagonist ± diuretic vs placebo Antihypertensive therapy resulted in an ARR of 3.7% for stroke (10.1% vs 13.8% ; p < 0.0001) and 4.8% for vascular events (15.0% vs 19.8% ; p < 0.0001) compared with placebo; dual therapy with a β-adrenoceptor antagonist and diuretic was superior to monotherapy with a β-adrenoceptor antagonist
STOP- Hypertension[18] 1627 hypertensive patients aged 70–84 years 3 β-adrenoceptor antagonists + 1 diuretic vs placebo Antihypertensive therapy reduced the number of primary endpoint eventsa by 36 (58 vs 94; p = 0.0031), fatal and non-fatal strokes by 24 (29 vs 53; p = 0.0081) and total deaths by 27 (36 vs 63; p = 0.0079) compared with placebo
SHEP[19] 4736 patients aged ≥60 years (mean 72 years) with systolic hypertension β-Adrenoceptor antagonist + diuretic vs placebo Antihypertensive therapy resulted in an ARR of 2.0% (3.6% vs 5.6%)
HYVET (pilot study)[20] 1283 hypertensive patients aged ≥80 years (mean age 83.8 years; range 79.5–96.1 years) Diuretic vs β-adrenoceptor antagonist vs placebo Antihypertensive therapy prevented 19 strokes but resulted in 20 additional non-stroke deaths per 1000 patients per year
HYVET[21] 3845 hypertensive patients aged ≥80 years (mean age 83.6 ± 3.2 years for active treatment, 83.5 ± 3.1 years for placebo) Indapamide vs placebo Treating 1000 patients with indapamide for 2 years would prevent 11 strokes (95% CI 0, 21)
Dyslipidaemia
HPS[22] 20 536 patients aged 40–80 years with a history of cerebrovascular disease (mean age 65.5 years; SD 7.8) or other arterial occlusive disease (mean age 63.7 years; SD 8.5) Simvastatin vs placebo In the 3280 patients with pre-existing cerebrovascular disease, simvastatin did not significantly reduce the absolute risk for stroke (10.3% vs 10.4%), but did reduce the absolute risk of having a major CVE by 5.1% (24.7% vs 29.9% ; p = 0.001)
SPARCL[23] 4731 patients aged ≥18 years of age with hyperlipidaemia, no known CHD and a history of stroke or TIA in the previous 1–6 months (mean age 62.5 years; SD 0.2 years) Atorvastatin vs placebo Treatment with atorvastatin resulted in a 2.2% ARR for stroke (p = 0.03) and a 3.5% ARR for a major CVE (p = 0.002)
PROSPER[24] 5804 patients aged 70–82 years with a history of, or risk factors for, vascular disease Pravastatin vs placebo Allocation to pravastatin resulted in an ARR of 2.1% (14.1% vs 16.2% ; p = 0.014) compared with placebo for the primary endpoint of CHD death, non-fatal MI, non-fatal stroke
Retrospective analysis of 50 clinical trials[25] 5924 persons aged ≥65 years (mean age range 71–74 years) enrolled in the Pfizer Atorvastatin Clinical Program Database Atorvastatin vs placebo The rate of having at least one adverse event was similar among patients taking 4 different doses of atorvastatin (10.2–16.1%) and placebo (15.0%) and the number of serious adverse events was low (≤1.0%)
a

Stroke, MI or cardiovascular death.

ARR = absolute risk reduction; CHD = coronary heart disease; CVE = cardiovascular event; MI = myocardial infarction; SD = standard deviation; TIA = transient ischaemic attack.