It's slightly concerning that the reviewers on this study are all part of the "Statin Industry" and thus, just like the controversial paper that suggested Statins are bad, this one also has to be taken with a pinch of salt.
You can it's here..I really want to see clarity on what evidence they looked at and how the study was done. I suppose we need to read the Lancet article.
you beat me by 26 seconds!!
RC interviewed just now on BBC. Apparently the study had 50,0000 taking statins, and 50,000 taking placebo. No difference between the two groups in terms of muscle pain. However, the trial is not identified, and we cannot se the trial data that he refers to. No idea who carried out this major study, or what group of people were being analysed/I've just had a quick look. There is no section outlining what data or studies looked at. There's no mention of any additional data being examined beyond re-surveying existing RCTs - or even a clear statement of precisely which RCTs they looked at.
So it seems they didn't actually look at the controversial clinical trial reports that Ben Goldacre has been agitating to access, or any of the additional statins trial data that Rory Collins has private access to.
So, preliminarily, this seems to be a general and abstract argument in principle about what RCTs can be taken to show.
This impression is supported by this language at the end uer Contributors:
"RC had the idea for this paper and wrote the initial drafts." And it's headlined as a Review.
So it seems to be a general theoretical argument about interpretation - not an examination of new data.
LSW
RC interviewed just now on BBC. Apparently the study had 50,0000 taking statins, and 50,000 taking placebo. No difference between the two groups in terms of muscle pain. However, the trial is not identified, and we cannot se the trial data that he refers to. No idea who carried out this major study, or what group of people were being analysed
Interesting also that the 'study' is talking about statins reducing haemorrhagic strokes in particular. My simplistic understanding of LDL is that it supposedly leads to plaque buildup and through this blood clots, thrombosis, and occlusive strokes. Not sure about leaky plumbing being caused by LDL.I heard him too. But I don't think, from scanning the article - have a look! - that there was *a* study, as in "the study". He must be talking about specific aspects or combinations of particular pre-existing studies. This article doesn't present any new data.
SdLDL is a relatively new concept that mainstream physicians have not yet been taught about. As we have seen recently the textbook 'bible' for endocrinologists does not mention it (2015 edition according to Luna51). So according to current belief systems used by HCP's and eminent professors is that LDL is the real killer, which must be exterminated. LDL is the White Van Man of the endocrine transport system.My biggest issue with Statins is that they don't tie in with the physiological model for Cholesterol. HDL is good, sdLDL is bad, LDL of its own isn't bad. Statins indiscriminately remove everything. You die. (Okay that's a bit extreme, but you get my point).
Did he say anything new?Prof Rory Collins is on the Jeremy Vine R2 show now.
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