| Literature DB >> 31758270 |
Anne Sillars1, Naveed Sattar2.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To describe lipid abnormalities in diabetes, when they occur and the evidence base for lipid management with established and new drugs to prevent diabetes complications. We also discuss how to manage statin intolerance. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Dyslipidemia; Ezetimibe; PCSK9 inhibitors; Statins; Type 1 diabetes; Type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31758270 PMCID: PMC6874523 DOI: 10.1007/s11886-019-1246-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Cardiol Rep ISSN: 1523-3782 Impact factor: 2.931
Summary of trial evidence for lipid lowering in type 2 diabetes
| Classification of drug | Key trials | Findings | Clinical implications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Statins | CTT | LDL-C reduction of 1 mmol/L results in approximately 23% reduction in CV event. Intensive statin regimes result in statistically significant 15% further reduction in major vascular events, without significant side effects. | Statins as first line in patients with diabetes. Nowadays, the most commonly used are atorvastatin and rosuvastatin. Both have greater benefits on TG reduction than the older simvastatin and pravastatin. |
| Ezetimibe | IMPROVE-IT | Reduced CV mortality, major CV event and stroke by 5.5% absolute RR (hazard ratio, 0.85; 95% confidence interval, 0.78–0.94) The largest relative reductions occurred in patients with DM were in MI (24%) and stroke (39%). | First add-on therapy if patients are not reaching targets for LDL-c or non-HDL-c despite maximally tolerated statin therapy |
| PCSK9 inhibitor | FOURIER | Evolocumab reduced cardiovascular outcomes in patients with diabetes: HR 0.83 (95% CI 0.75–0.93; | Currently reserved for patients at very high absolute risk for CVD. This includes patients with FH or existing CVD, with sustained elevations in LDL-c despite maximally tolerated statin therapy plus ezetimibe. |
| Fibrates | ACCORD | Modest changes seen in the reduction of TG levels and increase in HDL-C levels. | Add-on to statins for mixed hyperlipidemia, without robust evidence demonstrating improved outcomes in CVD risk. Further ongoing trials with newer fibrates. |
| Icosapent ethyl; Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) ethyl ester | REDUCE-IT | Primary endpoint event occurred in 17.2% of treated patients compared with 22.0% in placebo group (HR 0.75; 95% CI 0.68 to 0.83; | Potential new therapy with modest lowering of TG levels. Outcome benefits may be largely independent of TG lowering. Ongoing trials of similar agents should help reveal mechanisms in due course. |
| Bempedoic acid; ATP citrate lyase inhibitor | CLEAR-Harmony | Treatment reduced the mean LDL cholesterol level − 16.5% from baseline (difference vs. placebo in change from baseline, − 18.1 percentage points; 95% CI, − 20.0 to − 16.1; | Potential new therapy for LDL cholesterol lowering |
Fig. 1Ezetimibe composite efficacy outcomes by treatments and diabetes status. (With permission from: Giugliano RP, et al. Circulation 2018;137:1571–1582) [22••]
Summary points on lipid patterns and management in patients with diabetes
• Diabetes patients have a more atherogenic lipid profile which contributes to their excess risk for CVD—this is especially the case in younger onset type 2 diabetes who tend to be more obese at diagnosis and have higher triglyceride and lower HDL-c levels and therefore higher non-HDL-c. • Statins are first-line treatments in diabetes with the vast majority benefiting from statins, and the majority of countries recommend statins in diabetes without the need for a risk score. • As in the general population, if side effects occur with statins in patients with diabetes, they should be advised to retry the same statin at the same dose since most will be fine on retrial. If not, the dose can be lowered or alternative statin tried. Patients should be advised that the vast majority can take some form of statin without issues and trial and error will achieve the right statin for them. • Ezetimibe is an excellent add-on choice for patients with diabetes when they are not at target despite maximally tolerated statin dose or whether they are truly intolerant. • PCSK9 inhibitors work just as well in diabetes as in those without diabetes and with no evidence of glycemia dysregulation. They should be reserved for patients with diabetes are exceptionally high risk of CVD and elevated LDL-c levels despite maximally tolerated statin plus ezetimibe. • If patients with diabetes continue to demonstrate higher triglyceride levels despite statin therapy, then first consider secondary causes such as significant hyperglycemia or obesity. Fibrates can be considered in such patients to lower pancreatitis risk but notably, whether currently available fibrates lower CVD risk remains an open question. • Finally, as younger patients with both type 2 and type 1 diabetes lose the most years of life expectancy from their diabetes, more such patients should be offered statins earlier in the course of their lives. Future guidelines need to consider newer evidence with respect to age of diabetes onset and lifetime risks. |