| Literature DB >> 29318532 |
Peter P Toth1,2, Angelo Maria Patti3, Rosaria Vincenza Giglio3, Dragana Nikolic3, Giuseppa Castellino3, Manfredi Rizzo3, Maciej Banach4,5,6.
Abstract
Statin therapy is generally well tolerated and very effective in the prevention and treatment of cardiovascular disease, regardless of cholesterol levels; however, it can be associated with various adverse events (myalgia, myopathy, rhabdomyolysis, and diabetes mellitus, among others). Patients frequently discontinue statin therapy without medical advice because of perceived side effects and consequently increase their risk for cardiovascular events. In patients with statin intolerance, it may be advisable to change the dose, switch to a different statin, or try an alternate-day regimen. If intolerance is associated with all statins-even at the lowest dose-non-statin drugs and certain nutraceuticals can be considered. This review focuses on the definition of statin intolerance and on the development of clinical and therapeutic strategies for its management, including emerging alternative therapies.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29318532 PMCID: PMC5960491 DOI: 10.1007/s40256-017-0259-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Cardiovasc Drugs ISSN: 1175-3277 Impact factor: 3.571
Definitions of statin intolerance
| Society | Definition of statin intolerance | Year | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| National Lipid Association (NLA) | “Inability to tolerate at least two statins: one statin at the lowest starting daily dose and another statin at any daily dose, due to either objectionable symptoms (real or perceived) or abnormal laboratory determinations, which are temporally related to statin treatment and reversible upon statin discontinuation” | 2014 | [ |
| International Lipid Expert Panel (ILEP) | “Inability to tolerate at least two statins: one statin at the lowest starting daily dose and another statin at any daily dose, due to either objectionable symptoms (real or perceived) or abnormal laboratory determinations, which are temporally related to statin treatment and reversible upon statin discontinuation. The resolution of symptoms or changes in biomarkers or even significant improvement with dose reduction or withdrawal of treatment; symptoms or changes in biomarkers are not attributable to predispositions (drug–drug interactions and recognized conditions), increasing the risk of statin intolerance” | 2014 | [ |
| European Atherosclerosis Society (EAS) | “The assessment of statin-associated muscle symptoms (SAMS) includes the nature of muscle symptoms, increased creatine kinase levels and their temporal association with initiation of therapy with statin, and statin therapy suspension and rechallenge” | 2015 | [ |
| Canadian Consensus Working Group | “A clinical syndrome, not caused by drug interactions or risk factors for untreated intolerance and characterized by significant symptoms and/or biomarker abnormalities that prevent the long-term use and adherence to statins documented by challenge/dechallenge/rechallenge, where appropriate, using at least two statins, including atorvastatin and rosuvastatin, and that leads to failure of maintenance of therapeutic goals, as defined by national guidelines” | 2016 | [ |
Therapeutic possibilities for the treatment of statin-intolerant patients and their influence on low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels
| Agent | Subjects | Dose | Duration | LDL-C levels | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BA with low-dose statins | 134 hypercholesterolemic pts | 120 mg/day | 12 weeks | − 17.3 ± 4.0% ( | [ |
| 180 mg/day | − 24.3 ± 4.2% ( | ||||
| PL | − 4.2 ± 4.2% | ||||
| BA | 56 hypercholesterolemic pts | 240 mg/day vs. PL | 8 weeks (increase by 60 mg q2w) | − 28.7% ( | [ |
| BA with or without EZE | 177 hypercholesterolemic pts | 120 mg/day | 12 weeks | −27.5 ± 1.3 mg/dl ( | [ |
| 180 mg/day | − 30.1 ± 1.3 mg/dl ( | ||||
| EZE 10 mg/day | − 21.2 ± 1.3 mg/dl ( | ||||
| 120 mg + EZE 10 mg/day | − 43.1 ± 2.6 mg/dl ( | ||||
| 180 mg + EZE 10 mg/day | − 47.7 ± 2.8 mg/dl ( | ||||
| BA | 12,600 statin-intolerant pts expected | 180 mg/day | 6 years | Ongoing | [ |
| ATO | 60 hypercholesterolemic pts | 10 mg/day | 6 weeks | 100 ± 25 mg/dl ( | [ |
| 20 mg/alternate day | 68 ± 28 mg/dl ( | ||||
| 20 mg/day | 96 ± 41 mg/dl ( | ||||
| ROS | 45 hypercholesterolemic pts | 20 mg/alternate day | 6 weeks | − 40.9% ( | [ |
| 10 mg/day | − 78.5% ( | ||||
| ATO | 61 hypercholesterolemic pts | 20 mg/alternate day | 3 months | − 95 ± 31 mg/dl ( | [ |
| 20 mg/day | − 94 ± 28 mg/dl ( | ||||
| ROS | 37 dyslipidemic pts | 10 mg/alternate day | 6 weeks | −57 ± 1.2 mg/dl ( | [ |
| 10 mg/day | − 60 ± 1.0 mg/dl ( | ||||
| PRA | 104 dyslipidemic pts | Half-dose alternate days vs. daily | 4 months | 113 ± 21 mg/dl ( | [ |
| ATO | 54 hypercholesterolemic pts | 10 mg/day | 6 weeks | No statistically significant differences between the three groups regarding total or a percentage | [ |
| ATO | 40 hypercholesterolemic pts | 20 mg/alternate day | 12 weeks | No statistically significant differences between the two groups | [ |
| ATO | 60 pts with CAD | 10 mg/alternate day | 6 weeks | 105 ± 26 mg/dl ( | [ |
| 10 mg/day | 88 ± 21 mg/dl ( | ||||
| FLU | 23 hypercholesterolemic pts | 40 mg/alternate day | 6 weeks | 144 ± 21 mg/dl ( | [ |
| 20 mg/day | 138 ± 19 mg/dl ( | ||||
| ROS | 80 pts with primary hypercholesterolemia | 10 mg/alternate day | 8 weeks | 105.07 ± 26.30 mg/dl ( | [ |
| 10 mg/day | 94.10 ± 40.16 mg/dl ( | ||||
| ATO | 100 dyslipidemic pts | 10 mg/alternate day | 3 months | 73.6 ± 14.71 mg/dl ( | [ |
| 10 mg/day | 93.79 ± 17.48 mg/dl ( | ||||
| ATO | 141 pts with dyslipidemia or CAD | Alternate day vs. daily | 12 weeks | Alternate-day dosing of ATO was inferior to daily dosing in maintaining the NCEP-ATP III goal | [ |
| EZE | 432 pts with primary hypercholesterolemia | 5 mg/day | 12 weeks | − 15.7% ( | [ |
| 10 mg/day | − 18.5% ( | ||||
| EZE + statins | 769 pts with primary hypercholesterolemia | Statin + EZE 10 mg/day | 8 weeks | − 25.1% ( | [ |
| Statin + PL | − 3.7% ( | ||||
| EZE + SIM | 720 pts with FH | SIM + EZE 10 mg/day | 24 months | 141.3 ± 52.6 mg/dl ( | [ |
| EZE + SIM | 1128 pts with hypercholesterolemia and metabolic syndrome | EZE/SIM 10/20 mg/day | 6 weeks | − 49.6% ( | [ |
| EZE/SIM 10/40 mg/day | − 53.9% ( | ||||
| EZE + ROS | 239 pts with high risk of CHD | EZE/ROS 10/40 mg/day | 6 weeks | − 70% ( | [ |
| ROS 40 mg | − 56% ( | ||||
| PCSK9 inhibitor EVO with moderate- and high- intensity statins | 1117 primary hypercholesterolemia and mixed dyslipidemia pts | 140 mg vs. PL | 10 weeks | 66–75% ( | [ |
| 420 mg vs. PL | 12 weeks | 63–65% ( | |||
| PCSK9 inhibitor EVO with statin or EZE | 1359 dyslipidemic pts | 70 mg q2w + statin or EZE | 12 weeks | − 40.20% ( | [ |
| 105 mg q2w + statin or EZE | − 52.86% ( | ||||
| 140 mg q2w + statin or EZE | − 59.26% ( | ||||
| 280 mg q4w + statin or EZE | − 42.55% ( | ||||
| 350 mg q4w + statin or EZE | − 47.00% ( | ||||
| 420 mg q4w or EZE | − 52.66% ( | ||||
| PCSK9 inhibitor EVO with statin | 511 pts with uncontrolled LDL-C and history of intolerance to two or more statins | 420 mg/month | 24 weeks | − 102.9 mg/dl ( | [ |
| PCSK9 inhibitor ALI with EZE | 361 pts at moderate to high CV risk with statin intolerance | ALI 75 mg q2w | 24 weeks | −102.9 mg/dl ( | [ |
| EZE 10 mg | − 31.2 mg/dl ( | ||||
| Inclisiran with statin | 501 pts at high CVD risk with elevated LDL-C | Single dose of 200–500 mg/day or double dose of 100–300 mg/day | 180 days | 27.9–41.9% after a single dose | [ |
| Red yeast rice DS | 83 pts in dietary treatment | 2.4 g/day red yeast rice | 12 weeks | From 4.47 ± 0.70 to 3.49 ± 0.70 ( | [ |
| Plant extracts (red yeast rice, sugar cane-derived policosanols, and artichoke leaf extracts) | 39 pts with moderate hypercholesterolemia | Red yeast rice 166.67 mg (0.4% monacolin K), sugar cane extract 3.70 mg (90% policosanols–octacosanol 60%), artichoke leaf dry extract 200 mg (5–6% chlorogenic acid) daily | 16 weeks | − 14.1% ( | [ |
| Natural nutraceuticals (red yeast, policosanol, and berberine) | 933 dyslipidemic pts | 1 tablet/day associated with diet | 16 weeks | − 23.5% ( | [ |
| Nutraceutical combination (red yeast rice extract, berberine, policosanol, astaxanthin, CoQ10, folic acid) | 30 pts with moderate CV risk | Berberine 500 mg, policosanols 10 mg, folic acid 0.2 mg, CoQ10 2.0 mg, astaxanthin 0.5 mg daily | 8 weeks | − 21.1% ( | [ |
| Acid ethyl ester (AMR101) | 702 statin-treated pts | 4 or 2 g/day | 12 weeks | − 6.2% ( | [ |
| Chokeberry flavonoid extract | 44 pts after MI | 85 mg tid of chokeberry flavonoid extract ( | 6 weeks | Ox-LDL levels − 29% ( | [ |
| Spirulina | 312 pts | 1–10 g/day | 2–12 months | − 41.32 mg/dl ( | [ |
| BER vs. EZE | 228 pts with primary hypercholesterolemia | Berberine 500 mg, policosanol 10 mg, red yeast rice 200 mg | 6 months | − 31.7% ( | [ |
| EZE 10 mg/day | − 25.4% ( |
AEs adverse events, ALI alirocumab, ATO atorvastatin, BA bempedoic acid, BER berberine, CAD coronary artery disease, CHD coronary heart disease, CoQ10 coenzyme Q10, CV cardiovascular, CVD cardiovascular disease, DS dietary supplement, EVO evolocumab, EZE ezetimibe, FH familial hypercholesterolemia, FLU fluvastatin, LDL-C low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, MI myocardial infarction, NCEP-ATP III National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III, ND not defined, Ox-LDL oxidized low-density lipoprotein, PCSK9 proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9, PL placebo, PRA pravastatin, pts patients, qxw every x weeks, ROS rosuvastatin, SIM simvastatin, tid three times daily
| Statins are the gold standard for managing dyslipidemia in patients with elevated cardiovascular risk. Discontinuation of statin therapy is associated with an increase in cardiovascular events. |
| An important issue in the management of patients with statin intolerance/statin-associated muscle symptoms is the need to avoid statin discontinuation. Options include step-by-step reduction of the statin dose (dechallenge), switching to a different statin, or using intermittent dosages (alternate-day therapy). |
| New non-statin agents, as well as alternative therapy with nutraceuticals with or without a non-statin drug, may help to improve therapy adherence and reduce the risk for patients with true statin intolerance. Further studies in patients intolerant to statins are necessary to confirm the effectiveness and safety of nutraceuticals. In addition, these agents will have to be tested in long-term randomized controlled trials to more definitively assess their efficacy for reducing cardiovascular risk. |