| Literature DB >> 25391045 |
Amelia J McFarland1, Shailendra Anoopkumar-Dukie2, Devinder S Arora3, Gary D Grant4, Catherine M McDermott5, Anthony V Perkins6, Andrew K Davey7.
Abstract
3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors, commonly referred to as statins, are widely used in the treatment of dyslipidaemia, in addition to providing primary and secondary prevention against cardiovascular disease and stroke. Statins' effects on the central nervous system (CNS), particularly on cognition and neurological disorders such as stroke and multiple sclerosis, have received increasing attention in recent years, both within the scientific community and in the media. Current understanding of statins' effects is limited by a lack of mechanism-based studies, as well as the assumption that all statins have the same pharmacological effect in the central nervous system. This review aims to provide an updated discussion on the molecular mechanisms contributing to statins' possible effects on cognitive function, neurodegenerative disease, and various neurological disorders such as stroke, epilepsy, depression and CNS cancers. Additionally, the pharmacokinetic differences between statins and how these may result in statin-specific neurological effects are also discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25391045 PMCID: PMC4264186 DOI: 10.3390/ijms151120607
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Statins inhibit the conversion of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) to l-mevalonate, the rate-limiting step of the cholesterol synthesis pathway. Adapted from [10].
Pharmacokinetic (PK) characteristics of commonly prescribed statins, data summarised from [5,11,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23]. Blue-coloured moiety in chemical structures indicates the pharmacophore. * Logarithms of octanol–water distribution coefficients (log D) are presented at pH 7.0 for rosuvastatin and pH 7.4 for all other drugs.
| PK Parameter | Atorvastatin | Fluvastatin | Lovastatin | Pitavastatin | Pravastatin | Rosuvastatin | Simvastatin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Statin Type | II | II | I | II | I | II | I |
| Dosing Time | Any time of day | Bedtime | With food morning & night | Any time of day | Bedtime | Any time of day | Evening |
| Prodrug | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | Yes |
| Bioavailability | 12% | 9%–50% | 5% | 51% | 18% | 20% | <5% |
| Half-Life | 14 h | 2.3 h | 3 h | 12 h | 1.3–2.7 h | 19 h | 3 h |
| Volume of Distribution | 381 L | 330 L | (not available) | 148 L | 35 L | 134 L | (not available) |
| Log | 1.53 | 1.75 | 3.91 (lactone)/1.51 (acid) | 1.50 | −0.47 | −0.25 to −0.50 | 4.40 (lactone)/1.80 (acid) |
| Lipophilicity | Lipophilic | Lipophilic | Lipophilic | Lipophilic | Hydrophilic | Hydrophilic | Lipophilic |
| Active Metabolites | Yes | No | Yes | Yes (minimal) | Yes (minimal) | Yes (minimal) | Yes |
| CYP Substrate | 3A4 | 2C9 | 3A4 | 2C8, limited 2C9 | Limited 3A4 | Limited 2C9
| 3A4 |
| Effects on p-Glycoprotein | Substrate and inhibitor | No significant inhibition | Substrate and inhibitor | No significant inhibition | No significant inhibition | No significant inhibition | Substrate and inhibitor |
| OATP Transporters | 1B1, 2B1 | 1B1, 1B3, 2B1 | 1B1 | 1A2, 1B1, 1B3 | 1B1, 1B3, 2B1 | 1A2, 1B1, 1B3, 2B1 | 1B1 |
| Protein Binding | Very high (98%) | Very high (98%) | Very high (95%) | Very high (96%) | Moderate (50%) | High (90%) | Very high (95%) |
| Excretion (Renal) | <2% | 6% | 10% | 2% | 20% | 10% | 13% |
| Excretion (Faecal) | >98% | 93% | 83% | 79% | 70% | 90% | 60% |
Summary of statins’ effects on cognition and neurocognitive disorders.
| Disorder | Possible Statin-Induced Mechanisms | Strength of Evidence | Overall Consensus |
|---|---|---|---|
| General cognition | ↓ FPP and/or GGPP; modulation of adult neurogenesis; ↑ expression of neural growth factors. | Limited | Long-term statin treatment appears to be beneficial for cognitive function. Whether statins can cause acute cognitive disruption as a rare adverse effect is unclear due to lack of causal evidence from case reports. Identification of underlying mechanisms |
| Alzheimer’s disease | ↓ FPP and/or GGPP; ↓ APP production; ↓ ROCK activity; ↓ amyloid-β production; ↑ amyloid-β degradation; ↓ neuroinflammation; ↓ ROS. | Numerous | Studies suggest statins, if started before old age and without cognitive dysfunction at baseline, may reduce incidence of AD. It is likely different statins have different capacities for inducing this effect. |
| Parkinson’s disease | ↓ ROS; ↓ nitric oxide; ↓ lipid peroxidation; ↓ neuroinflammation; ↓ NF-κB activity; ↓ neuronal loss. | Numerous | Data from cell and animal models is encouraging, however further well-designed prospective studies are needed to evaluate statins’ clinical application in PD. |
| Multiple sclerosis | Altered Th1/Th2 ratio; ↓ neuroinflammation; ↑ remyelination-associated genes; ↑/↓ differentiation from OPC to OD; ↓ ROCK activity; modulation of NF-κB activity. | Numerous | Vast discrepancies between models limits our understanding of the mechanisms of statins in MS. It appears likely that modulation of neuroinflammation and/or T cell immunity is involved. Further studies needed to determine if benefit is seen with statins other than simvastatin in MS. |
| Neurofibromatosis Type I | ↓ Ras activity; rescue long-term potentiation deficit. | Limited | Further cell and animal studies are recommended to better understand possible clinical application in NF-1 before any further trials in children with the disorder are conducted. |
Summary of statins’ effects on neurological disorders.
| Disorder | Possible Statin-Induced Mechanisms | Strength of Evidence | Overall Consensus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stroke | Modulation of eNOS; ↓ nitric oxide; ↓ ROS; ↓ MMPs. | Many | Statins reduce incidence of ischemic and haemorrhagic stroke, likely through antioxidant effects. |
| Epilepsy | Lipid raft disruption; ROCK inhibition; ↑ PI3K pathway activity. | Limited | Very different excitoprotective properties between statins. More studies are required. |
| Depression | Modulation of NMDA receptor activity; ↓ nitric oxide. | Mainly epidemiological studies. Recent meta-analysis suggested statins reduce risk of depression. Limited mechanism-based studies. | Whether the observed effects from qualitative studies are statin-induced, due to decreased cholesterol, or due to an improved quality of life, or a combination is unclear. |
| Psychiatric disorders | Unknown. | Limited observational studies. | Causality is unclear. If prevalence is affected by statins, it is thought to be rare and only in predisposed patients. |
| CNS cancers | ↑ caspase-3-mediated apoptosis; cell-cycle arrest; ↓ ERK1/2; ↓ Akt activity. | Limited | Further |
| Brain and spinal cord injury | ↓ apoptosis; ↓ inflammation; ↓ RhoA/ROCK activity; ↓axonal degradation; ↓ myelin degradation. | Numerous | Statins appear to exert beneficial effects |