| Literature DB >> 29507718 |
Bob G Schultz1, Denise K Patten1, Daniel J Berlau1.
Abstract
Nearly 30% of adults 40 years and older in the United States are on a statin. Their widespread use heightens the importance of careful consideration of their varied effects on the body. Although randomized controlled trials have not confirmed cognitive impairing effects with statins, continuing evidence suggests statins have the ability to cause reversible cognitive impairment in some patients. Paradoxically, statins have also been shown to decrease the risk of dementia, Alzheimer's disease, and improve cognitive impairment in some cases. However, randomized controlled trials have similarly failed to find the beneficial effect. Supporting evidence for both claims is compelling whereas known limitations of the clinical trials may explain the lack of findings. This narrative review aims to explain why there is still controversy and how both effects can, and may, be possible. The mechanisms that have been hypothesized for each effect are seemingly independent from one another and may explain the contradicting results. Being mindful of the complex effects of statins, health care providers need to be able to identify patients who are at risk for or already experiencing cognitive impairment from statin use while also identifying those who could potentially decrease their risk of dementia with statins.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Cholesterol; Cognition; Dementia; Memory; Neuroprotection; Statin; Vascular dementia
Year: 2018 PMID: 29507718 PMCID: PMC5830056 DOI: 10.1186/s40035-018-0110-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Neurodegener ISSN: 2047-9158 Impact factor: 8.014
Evidence Supporting Cognitive Impairment
| Study | Study Type | Statin | Participants | Findings/Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FDA, 2012, [ | Safety Literature Review | All | N/A | Statin labels should include cognitive impairment however the cardiovascular risks outweigh the small cognitive impairment risk. |
| Posvar EL, et al., 1996, [ | Rising single-dose, partially blinded, three period study | Ator | 22 | Tolerance study that resulted in one participant experiencing cognitive side effects at the 120-mg solution dose. The participant experienced mild, transient restlessness, euphoria, and mental confusion that were considered to be dose-limiting side effects. |
| Wagstaff LR, et al., 2003, [ | Review of case reports | Ator(23), Prava(1), Sim (36) | 60 | Case reports raise the possibility that statins may be associated with cognitive impairment in rare cases. |
| Muldoon MF, et al., 2000, [ | Double-blind investigational | lova | 209 | Lovastatin treatment resulted in small performance decrements on neuropsychological tests of attention and psychomotor speed, the clinical importance of which is uncertain. |
| Muldoon MF, et al., 2004, [ | Randomized trial | Sim | 308 | Patients given placebos performance improved more than statin patients on cognition tests given at day 0 and 6 months. |
| Evans MA, et al., 2009, [ | Patient survey-based analysis | All | 171 | There is a characterizable association between statins and cognitive impairment. 128 patients experienced cogitive adrs determined to be probably or definitely related to statin therapy. Of 143 patients who reported stopping statin therapy, 128 reported improvement in cognitive problems, sometimes within days of statin discontinuation. |
| M Sahebzamani, 2014, [ | FDA AERs database analysis | All | 4867 | Lipophilic statins (especially atorvastatin and simvastatin) have significantly more reports of Cog. Dys. than hydrophilic statins. Estimated Cog Dys reporting with atorvastatin and simvastatin is truly 3,00–30,000 reports/year. |
ator atorvastatin, flu fluvastatin, lova lovastatin, prav pravastatin, rosu rosuvastatin, sim simvastatin
Evidence Opposing Cognitive Impairment
| Study | Study Design | Statin | Participants | Findings/Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ott BR, et al., 2015, [ | Systematic review and meta-analysis | All | 56,655 | Statin therapy was not associated with cognitive impairment in RCTs. |
| Richardson K, et al., 2013, [ | Systematic review | All | 56,043 | Larger and better-designed studies are needed to draw unequivocal conclusions about the effect of statins on cognition. Published data do not suggest an adverse effect of statins on cognition; however, the strength of available evidence is limited, particularly with regard to high-dose statins. |
| Benito-León J, et al., 2010, [ | Population based study | Ator, flu, lova, prav, sim, | 548 | Statin users and controls performed similarly on neuropsychological tests. |
| Lilly SM, et al., 2014, [ | Retrospective database investigational study | Ator, flu, lova, prava, rosu, sim | 13,626 | Non-persistent statin users had a greater risk of being diagnosed with schizophrenia/psychosis and cognitive disorders compared with persistent users. |
| Swiger KJ, et al., 2013, [ | Systematic review and meta-analysis | All | 23,541 | In patients without baseline cognitive dysfunction, the results of the available studies are most compatible with no significant short-term cognitive detriments related to statin therapy, whereas long-term data suggest a beneficial role in the prevention of dementia. |
| McGuiness B, et al., 2016, [ | Systematic review | Prava, Sim | 26,340 | There were no differences between statin and placebo groups on five different cognitive tests. |
ator atorvastatin, flu fluvastatin, lova lovastatin, prav pravastatin, rosu rosuvastatin, sim simvastatin