ROSIGLITAZONE AND CARDIOVASCULAR OUTCOMES a rand rmandy IA.Charbonnel B.Eckland TICLES ON THD ds to log on tor elec 02g N ENCL J MED 3564 WWW.NEJM.ORG JUNE14.2007 2471 Rosiglitazone and Cardiovascular Outcomes n engl j med 356;24 www.nejm.org june 14, 2007 2471 clinical and clinical cardiac safety considerations. Rockville, MD: Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, 2006. (Accessed May 18, 2007, at http://www.fda.gov/cder/ present/DIA2006/El-Hage_CardiacSafety. ppt.) Lemay DG, Hwang DH. Genome-wide identification of peroxisome proliferator response elements using integrated computational genomics. J Lipid Res 2006; 47:1583-7. Dormandy JA, Charbonnel B, Eckland 30. 31. DJ, et al. Secondary prevention of macrovascular events in patients with type 2 diabetes in the PROactive Study (PROspective pioglitAzone Clinical Trial In macroVascular Events): a randomised controlled trial. Lancet 2005;366:1279-89. Goldberg RB, Kendall DM, Deeg MA, et al. A comparison of lipid and glycemic effects of pioglitazone and rosiglitazone in patients with type 2 diabetes and dyslipidemia. Diabetes Care 2005;28:1547- 54. 32. Riveline JP, Danchin N, Ledru F, Varroud-Vial M, Charpentier G. Sulfonylureas and cardiovascular effects: from experimental data to clinical use: available data in humans and clinical applications. Diabetes Metab 2003;29:207-22. Home PD, Pocock SJ, Beck-Nielsen H, et al. Rosiglitazone Evaluated for Cardiac Outcomes and Regulation of Glycaemia in Diabetes (RECORD): study design and protocol. Diabetologia 2005;48:1726-35. Copyright © 2007 Massachusetts Medical Society 33. 34. full text of all journal articles on the world wide web Access to the complete text of the Journal on the Internet is free to all subscribers. To use this Web site, subscribers should go to the Journal’s home page (www.nejm.org) and register by entering their names and subscriber numbers as they appear on their mailing labels. After this one-time registration, subscribers can use their passwords to log on for electronic access to the entire Journal from any computer that is connected to the Internet. Features include a library of all issues since January 1993 and abstracts since January 1975, a full-text search capacity, and a personal archive for saving articles and search results of interest. All articles can be printed in a format that is virtually identical to that of the typeset pages. Beginning 6 months after publication, the full text of all Original Articles and Special Articles is available free to nonsubscribers who have completed a brief registration. The New England Journal of Medicine Downloaded from nejm.org on February 5, 2016. For personal use only. No other uses without permission. Copyright © 2007 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved