Skip banner and top navigation
NHLBI Logo and Link
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: People, Science, Health
 TEXT SIZE: 
 HOME  SITE INDEX  CONTACT US
  
 information for researchers
Link to the National Institutes of Health Link to the Department of Health and Human Services
Skip left side navigation and go to content
Dataset Home
List of Available Datasets

All Studies

Observational Studies

Clinical Trials
Procedures for Obtaining Datasets
NHLBI Limited Access Data Policy
Funding Mechanisms for Limited Access Investigators
Institutional Review Board Approval
Teaching Dataset
Limited Access Data Policy, Data Set Preparation & Procedures FAQ

The Women's Angiographic Vitamin and Estrogen Trial (WAVE)

Objectives:

Determine the efficacy of of estrogen replacement and antioxidant vitamins for preventing angiographic progression of coronary artery disease.

Background:

Prior to the WAVE trial, Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) and antioxidant vitamins were widely used for primary and secondary prevention in postmenopausal women with coronary disease, but clincal trials had not yet demonstrated benefit to support these therapies.

Subjects:

Seven clinical centers randomized 423 postmenopausal women with one or more angiographically documented coronary vessel stenosis of 15-75%. The study design was a double blind, 2X2 factorial consisting of active hormone replacement therapy or placebo and active vitamins E and C or their placebos. Randomization was stratified for clinical center and prior hysterectomy. Women in the active arm of the HRT treatment received either conjugated equine estrogen (prior history of hysterectomy) or conjugated equine estrogen and medroxypregesterone acetate (women with a uterus). Women assigned to the active arm of the vitamin therapy took two capsules daily of vitamin E and two tablets daily of vitamin C. The primary endpoint was mean change in minimum lumen diameter as determined by angiography.

Conclusions:

After a mean interval of 2.8 years, neither HRT nor antioxidant vitamin supplements provided cardiovascular benefit in postmenopausal women with coronary disease. Instead, a potential for harm was suggested with each treatment.(JAMA 2002; 288:2432-40)

 
Links

Study Website

Study Documentation

Data Distribution Agreement

Skip footer links and go to content

HOME · SEARCH · ACCESSIBILITY · SITE INDEX · OTHER SITES · PRIVACY STATEMENT · FOIA · CONTACT US