Title: An Update on Lipid Management
1An Update on Lipid Management
2- Statins are highly effective and well tolerated
for the treatment of dyslipidemia. - Decrease cardiovascular and all-cause mortality
as primary or secondary prevention - To reduce LDL and triglyceride levels, increase
HDL level slightly, and decrease clinical events - Not all patients can tolerate the statins or
achieve their treatment goal with these drugs - Clinical events still occur
3Occurrence of Cardiovasculer Events Despite
Treatment with Statins in Five Primary and
Secondary Prevention Trials
4- Statin produced a significant overall reduction
in the relative risk for clinical events, 63-78
of events were not prevented. - Limitation of available statin only a small
increase in HDL levels, not very effective for
markedly elevated TG level. - Both HDL and TG are independent risk factors for
coronary heart disease (CHD). - VA-HIT Every 1 increase in HDL level produce a
3 reduction in death or MI. - The important of HDL and TG is reflected in ATP
III guideline for lipid management.
5New Therapeutic Agents
- Statin
- Bile Acid Sequestrants
- Selective Cholesterol Absorption Inhibitors
- Lovastatin plus Niacin
6Statin Rosuvastain (Crestor)
- A potent HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor
- Treatment of primary hypercholesterolemia, mixed
dyslipidemia, hypertriglyceridemia, and
homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia. - Rosuvastatin, a new statin that reduce LDL levels
and increases HDL levels at least more
effectively than atovastatin.
7Rosuvastain (Crestor)
- Manufactured in the US by AstraZeneca
- Dated Approved by FDA Aug 12, 2003
- Supplied 5, 10, 20, 40 mg/tab.
- Dosage 5 to 40 mg orally once daily
- With or without food, at any time of day
- Initial Response Within 2 weeks
- Structure hydrophilicity
- - containing a polar methane sulfonamide group
8Rosuvastain (Crestor)
- Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption Bioavailability 20
- Distribution 88 bound to plasma proteins
- Metabolism Liver (10), CYP2C9 and 2C19
- Excretion Renal excretion (10), feces (90)
- Half-life 13-20 hrs
- Special population
- Severe renal impairment (CCrlt30 ml/min)
- - starting dose 5 mg/d with titration not to
exceed 10 mg/d - - chronic hemodialysis dose reduction (Css?50)
- Hepatic insufficiency
- - mild to moderate no dose adjustments
- - liver disease related to chronic alcohol use
Cp mod. ? - Pregnancy Category X
9Dose-response effect of rosuvastatin and
atovastatin on LDL-c and HDL-c
Rosuvastatin (mg)
Atorvastatin (mg)
Linear regression model
LDL-c
HDL-c
1. Olsson AG. Am J Cardiol 200188504-8 2.
Olsson AG. Am J Cardiol 200187B33-6
10Effects of Rosuva- (5 or 10 mg/d) VS Atorva-
(10mg/d) on the serum lipid profile of patients
at 12 weeks
P lt 0.05
Davidson MH et al. J Am Coll Cardiol
200137(suppl A)292A
11Effects of Rosuva- (5 or 10 mg/d) vs Prava-
(20mg/d) and Simva- (20mg/d) on the serum lipid
profile of patients at 12 weeks
P lt 0.05
Paoletti R et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 200137(suppl
A)291A
12Characteristics of Statins
Knopp RH. N Engl J Med 1999341498-511
13Adverse Events of Rosuvastain (Crestor)
NDA approval letter 08/2003
14The risk factor of drug induced myopathy
- High dose of statin
- Renal insufficiency (Scr gt2.0 mg/dl)
- Combination with fibrate and
- cytochrome P-450 inhibitor
- Age gt 70 y/o
15Clinically Reported Drug Interactions With
Statins Associated With Rhabdomyolysis
Arch Intern Med. 2003163553-64 FDA
approval letter 08/2003
16Fluvastatin (Lescol?)
Lovastatin (Mevacor?)
Atovastatin (Lipitor?)
Simvastatin (Zocor?)
Rosuvastain (Crestor)
Pravastatin (Mevalotin?)
17Physical Properties and Structures
- Hydrophobic and hydrophilic
- Hydrophobic agents
- Simvastatin (Zocor?) Lovastatin (Mevacor?)
- Atovastatin (Lipitor?)
- Hydrophilic agents
- Rosuvastatin (Crestor?) Pravastatin (Mevalotin?)
Fluvastatin (Lescol?) - Chemical structure
- Derive from fungi
- Lovastatin (Mevacor?) Pravastatin (Mevalotin?)
- Simvastatin (Zocor?)
- Synthetic
- Rosuvastatin (Crestor?) Fluvastatin (Lescol?)
- Atovastatin (Lipitor?)
18Alternative therapy?
- Combination with Cytochrome P-450 inhibitor
- Pravastatin (Mevalotin?)
- Incidence of myopathy
- Pravastatin (Mevalotin?), Rosuvastatin (Crestor?)
lt Lovastatin (Mevacor?), Simvastatin (Zocor?) - If Pravastatin --gt myopathy
- suggest switching to Atovastatin (Lipitor?) or
Rosuvastatin (Crestor?), not chemically similar
agents, such as Simvastatin (Zocor?) or
Lovastatin (Mevacor?)
19Steps to minimize the risk of muscle toxicity
with statin therapy
- Use statin alone .
- Keep the dose of the statin and fibrate low
- Avoid (or cautiously use) combination therapy in
renal impairment - Assure no interaction
- Teach the patient to recognize muscle symptom
20Steps to minimize the risk of muscle toxicity
with statin therapy
- 6. Discontinue therapy if muscle symptom are
- present and CPK is gt 10 times the upper
limit or - normal.
- 7. If CPK is increase butlt 3 times and the
patient - is Asymptomatic? CPK reassessment in 2 weeks
- 8. If myalgias are due to the treatment, even if
CK is not increased ? prefer not re-administer
the - same treatment
21Bile Acid Sequestrants
- The sole precursor of bile acids is cholesterol.
- Bile Acid sequestrants are nonabsorbable polymers
that act by binding bile acids in the intestine,
preventing the reabsorption of bile acids. - Decrease in hepatic cholesterol concentrations
produces an upregulation of LDL receptors,
increased LDL clearance from the plasma
22Intestinal Cholesterol Absorption
23Bile Acid Sequestrants
- Colesevelam (WelChol?) is a new bile Acid
sequestrants that differ from earlier agents in
that it has multiple hydrophobic side chains
extending from polymers backbone. - The bile acid binding sites are located at the
base of these side chain. - The primary limitation of colestyramine and
colestipol is GI intolerance, as constipation.
24Colesevelam (WelChol?) 625
mg/tab
- Manufactured by Sankyo
- Dated Approved by FDA May 26, 2000
- Supplied 625 mg/tab.
- Colesevelam have several advantage over bile acid
sequestrants such as cholestyramine and
colestipol. - Given simultaneously with statins, the lack of
drug interaction,high potency, a decreased
frequency of GI adverse events, and a tablet
formulation. - The primarily disadvantage is that attenuates the
TG reduction produced by statins alone.
25Effect of Colesevelam on LDL-c
Davidson MH et al. Expert Opin Investig Drug
200092663-71
26Effect of colesevelam plus statins on lipid
parameters
Hunninghake D et al. Atherosclerosis
2001158407-16 Knapp HH. Am J Med
2001110352-60
27Clinical Features of BARs
- Products available
- Cholestyramine (Questran), 4-16 g/d
- Colestipol (Colestid), 5-20 g/d
- Colesevelam (WelChol), 625 mg/tab., 6-7 tab./d
- Adverse effects
- GI intolerance constipation, bloating, abdominal
pain, flatulence - Lack systemic toxicity
- Drug interactions (colestipol and cholestyramine)
- Bind other negatively charged drugs
- Impede the absorption of drugs and/or fat-solube
vitamines - Must give other drugs 1 hour before or 4-6 hours
after
28Selective Cholesterol Absorption Inhibitors-
Ezetimibe (Zetia?)
- First agent in a new class that selectively
inhibits absorption of cholesterol at brush
border of the small intestine. - Manufactured in the US by Merck/Schering.
- Date Approved by the FDA October 25, 2002
- Supplied 10 mg/tab.
- The action results in decreased cholesterol
delivery to the liver. - Ezetimibe is indicated for monotherapy or in
combination with statins.
29Ezetimibe (Zetia?) Mechanism of Action
- Selectively inhibits intestinal cholesterol
absorption - ?intestinal delivery of cholesterol to the liver
- ?expression of hepatic LDL receptors
- ?cholesterol content of atherogenic particles
- Ezetimibe and its active glucuronide metabolite
circulate enterohepatically - Delivers agent back to the site of action
- Limits systemic exposure
- Moderate reductions in LDL (lt20), Apo-B, TG, and
increase HDL.
30Ezetimibe (Zetia?) Dosage and Administration
- Dose 10 mg once day alone or with statin, any
time of day, with or without food. - Elderly, mild hepatic or renal insufficiency
dosage adjustment is not necessary - Not recommended in treatment of children younger
than 10 years of age. - Adverse effect
- GI diarrhea, abdominal pain
- Musculoskeletal back pain, arthralgia
- Respiratory sinusitis, coughing, pharyngitis
- Miscellaneous fatigue, viral infection
31Ezetimibe (Zetia?) - Pharmacokinetics
- Onset
- Initial response within 1 week
- Peak response 2 to 4 weeks
- Total protein binding greater than 90
- Metabolism
- Intestine, extensive Liver, glucuronide
conjugation - Metabolite Glucuronide (active)
- Excretion
- Renal 11 (9 active metabolite in the urine)
- Faces extensive, 78 (69 unchanged drug)
- Elimination half-life approximately 22 to 24
hours
32Ezetimibe (Zetia?) - Metabolism
- Ezetimibe undergoes glucuronidation in the
intestinal wall and is then metabolized to its
active glucuronide metabolite in the liver and
delivered back to the intestine for enterohepatic
recirculation - The enterohepatic recirculation helps account for
ezetimibes 22 hour half-life - Ezetimibe is not an inducer or inhibitor of
cytochrome P450 enzymes, reducing the risk for
potential drug interactions with many common
drugs enzymatically affected by cytochrome P450
enzymes
33Ezetimibe (Zetia?) Drug Interaction
- Statins No significant pharmacokinetic
interaction. - Cholestyramine Decreased the mean AUC of total
ezetimibe concentration by 50. Ezetimibe should
be administered ?2 hours before or ?4 hours after
a resin. - Fibrate Not currently recommended in combination
with ezetimibe, as safety and efficacy has not
yet been established by clinical trials. - Cyclosporin May substantially increase ezetimibe
levels - No significant pharmacokinetic interactions with
antacids, cimetidine, warafrin, digoxin, ethinyl
estradiol, glipizide, tolbutamide.
34Ezetimibe (Zetia?) Cautions
- Contraindication
- Prior hypersensitivity to ezetimibe
- Precautions
- Hepatic dysfunction (moderate to severe) or
biliary obstruction - Pregnancy (human data unavailable)
- Breastfeeding period (human data unavailable)
- Statin is contraindicated in pregnant.
35Ezetimibe (Zetia?) Laboratory Safety Monitoring
- Laboratory parameters
- Liver function tests periodically when ezetimibe
is co-administered with an HMG-CoA reductase
inhibitor - Physical examination
- Signs/symptoms of toxicity, including GI
symptoms, headache, sensitivity (eg, rash)
36Ezetimibe (Zetia?) Efficacy Mean percentage
change (Week 12 )
Bays HE et al. Clin Ther 2001231209-30
37Ezetimibe (Zetia?) Efficacy Added On to
Ongoing Statin Therapy
Patients on ongoing stable statin therapy not
reaching NCEP ATP II LDL-c goal
RANDOMIZATION
Open-lable statin ezetimibe
(n379, mean LDL-c138 mg/dl)
Open-lable statin placebo
(n390, mean LDL-c139 mg/dl)
40 on atorvastatin (weighted mean baseline dose
34 mg) 31 simvastatin (37 mg) and 29 others
combined (pravastatin 20 mg, fluvastatin 35 mg,
lovastatin 26 mg, cerivastatin 0.4mg)
Gogne C et al. Am J Cardiol 2002901084-91
38Ezetimibe (Zetia?) Efficacy Added On Study
Gogne C et al. Am J Cardiol 2002901084-91
39Ezetimibe (Zetia?) Efficacy (10 10 80)
Mean percentage change in LDL-c
Zetia Atorva-10
Atorvastatin
Ballantyne CM et al. Circulation 20031072409-15
40Statin and Complementary GI-Acting Drugs vs
Statin Titration
41Niacin Extended Release Lovastatin (Advicor?)
- Manufactured by Kos Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
- Date Approved by the FDA Nov. 04, 2003
- Supplied 500 mg/20 mg 750 mg/20 mg 1000 mg/20
mg - Once-daily extended-release niacin and
lovastatin. - Niacin markedly reduces triglyceride levels and
increases HDL levels, smaller effects on lowering
LDL levels. - Niacin monotherapy is used infrequently to lower
LDL-C level, primarily because it is poorly
tolerated at high doses required for monotherapy.
42Advicor? Dosage and Administration
- Fixed-dose combination formulation primary
hypercholesterolemia and mixed dyslipidemia. - Usual effective doses 1000 mg extended-release
niacin/20 mg lovastatin to 2000/40 mg once daily. - Severe renal impairmentshould not be exceeded
fixed-dose of 500 to 1000/20 mg daily. - Liver dysfunction, particularly active/severe
liver disease, unexplained transaminase
elevations Should be avoided. - Elderly Dosage adjustment is not necessary
43Niacin Extended Release Lovastatin (Advicor?)
- Augment reductions in LDL-C and triglycerides and
increases in HDL-C. - Treatment primary hypercholesterolemia and mixed
dyslipidemia. - Myopathy 2
- Rhabdomyolysis has not been reported.
- Adverse events flushing episodes (warmth,
redness, itching, and/or tingling) 5383.
44Niacin ER/L (Advicor?) vs Monotherapy with
Atorvastatin or Simvastatin
Niacin ER/L 1000/40
Atorvastatin 10
- Week 8
Niacin ER/L 1000/40
Simvastatin 20
- Week 12
P lt 0.01 vs simvastatin
Bays H et al. Am J Cardiol 200391667-72
P lt 0.001 vs simvastatin and atorvastatin
45Advicor? Pharmacokinetics
- Onset Peak response4 weeks
- Absorption Bioavailability (niacin) 30
- Total protein binding Niacin 20 L greater
than 95 - Metabolism Liver, extensive,active metabolites
- Excretion
- Renal at least 50 (niacin) 10 (lovastatin)
- Faces about 80 (lovastatin)
- Elimination half-life L-4.5 hours Niacin-20-48
min
46Advicor? Contraindications
- Prior hypersensitivity to niacin or to lovastatin
or other HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors - Pregnancy
- Breastfeeding period
- Active peptic ulcer disease (exacerbation)
- Active liver disease or unexplained persistent
transaminase elevations (exacerbation) - Arterial bleeding (exacerbation niacin component)
47Advicor? Laboratory Safety Monitoring (1)
- Laboratory parameters
- Liver function tests (pretherapy and every 6 to
12 weeks for the first 6 months, then
periodically) - Creatine kinase and urine myoglobin in patients
presenting with symptoms of muscle pain,
weakness, or tenderness a level exceeding 10
times the upper limit of normal indicates
myopathy in patients - Renal function tests before and periodically
during therapy (renal insufficiency is a risk
factor for rhabdomyolysis) renal function should
be determined in patients with symptoms
suggestive of myopathy - Periodic during therapy serum phosphorus,
platelet counts, prothrombin time, blood glucose
(frequently in diabetics or prediabetics), serum
uric acid
48Advicor? Laboratory Safety Monitoring (2)
- Physical examination
- Symptoms of myopathy (eg, muscle pain, weakness)
particularly during the first month of treatment
or during upward dose adjustment - Signs/symptoms of other toxicity, including GI
symptoms (persistent nausea dictates ALT/AST
determinations), flushing severity/persistence,
headache, and dermatologic symptoms (eg, rash)
49Conclusion
- Improvements in the evaluation and treatment of
hyperlipidemia have been dramatic, but the
management of the condition continues to evolve
and improve. - ATP III guideline increased appreciation of the
absolute risk of CHD and the need to treat
patients aggressively with lipid therapy base on
their overall risk. - Statin are firstline agents for many lipid
problems, but some patients do not achieve their
goals with theses agents, and CHD events may
occur despite aggressive statin therapy.
50Conclusion
- Additional lipid-lowering agents and technique
have been approved recently or in the late stages
of clinical trial. - New bile acid sequestrants, statin-niacin
combination products, new statin, and selective
cholesterol inhibitors. - Rationale for combination therapy is to alter
lipid parameters by complementary pathways. - Most desirable regimen Combination therapy or
monotherapy, should optimize all the major lipid
parameters (I.e. LDL, HDL, TG) and be documented
to reduce clinical events.
51Q1 What antilipidemic should not be used to
lower triglycerides?
- A. atorvastatin.
- B. Cholestyramine.
- C. Niacin.
- D. Ezetimibe.
52Q2 Selective cholesterol absorption inhibitors
such as ezetimibe
- A. Decrease dietary and biliary cholesterol
absorption - through interference with intestinal
cholesterol transport . - B. Complete with dietary and biliary cholesterol
for inclusion into micells in the GI tract,
disrupting cholesterol and fat absorption. - C. Prevent the reabsorption of bile acids, the
precursor of cholesterol. - D. Inhibit lipolysis, decreasing the availability
of free fatty acids in circulation.
53Q3 Ezetimibe inhibits absorption of fat soluble
vitamins.
54- Q4
- R.E. is a 32-year-old white man with
dyslipidemia, CHD, a history of MI at age 30,
hypertension, and gastroesophageal reflux
disease. He presents to the clinic for follow-up
of dyslipidemia. R.E. reported that he has been
suffering from significant myalgias, particularly
during his work hours (he works for a local food
distributor and loads trucks all day long).
His current drugs are HCTZ 25 mg
QD, Metoprolol 50 mg BID Lisinopril 40 mg/day
Pravastatin 20 mg at bedtime Niaspan 1000 mg at
bedtime NTG sublingual 0.4 mg as needed.
55Lab Values
Niaspan added
Pravastatin added
56Which one of the following is the best way to
handle the adverse drug reaction?
- Discontinue niaspan and add gemifibrozil.
- Switch from pravastatin to simvastatin.
- Switch from pravastatin to fluvastatin.
- Discontinue pravastatin and add fish oil.
57Fluvastatin (Lescol?)
Lovastatin (Mevacor?)
Atovastatin (Lipitor?)
Simvastatin (Zocor?)
Rosuvastain (Crestor)
Pravastatin (Mevalotin?)
58Thank You for Your Attention and Opinion