Introduction: Early statin treatment has beneficial effects on the prognosis after acute coronary syndromes. We investigated the impact of prior statin treatment on the outcome of patients without a prior history of coronary artery disease (CAD) who presented with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and were treated with thrombolysis.
Methods: The study enrolled 1032 consecutive patients who satisfied the above criteria. They were categorized into two groups, based on their prior statin treatment for at least 3 months before admission: the statin pretreatment group (n=124) and the statin-naïve group (n=908). All patients received high-dose statins during hospitalization and were prescribed statins after discharge. The primary outcome was the incidence of successful thrombolysis, as expressed by the percentage of patients with 50% ST-segment resolution and complete retrosternal pain resolution at 90 minutes. Secondary outcomes included reduction in high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) and CK-MB levels, and in-hospital, short- and long-term cardiovascular mortality.
Results: ST-segment resolution 50% was observed in 63.7% of the statin-pretreatment group and in 49.1% of statin-naïve patients (p<0.01). Statin pretreatment was associated with lower hs-CRP and peak CK-MB levels (p<0.001). The statin-pretreatment group had lower 30-day mortality (5.6% vs. 12.3%, p<0.05), whereas no significant differences were detected in in-hospital or 3-year mortality.
Conclusions: Prior statin treatment in patients without a history of CAD who present with STEMI is associated with successful thrombolysis, decreased systemic inflammation, a lesser degree of myocardial damage, and a possible reduction in short-term mortality.