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What Are Pleiotropic Effects? The Role of Statins in Decreasing Inflammation

By Gregory W. Rutecki, MD | March 11, 2013
Dr Rutecki is Professor of Internal Medicine at the University of South Alabama at Mobile.

It would be a mistake to attribute all beneficial outcomes obtained from statins solely to cholesterol lowering. Statins have pleiotropic effects—that is, they are simultaneously capable of producing more than one benefit, and in cardiovascular risk reduction, they accomplish more than simply lowering cholesterol.

Statin pleiotropy is an important concept. Because decreases in cholesterol levels account for no more than 30% of the advantageous effects of statins on cardiovascular risk, myriad other positive actions contingent on statins will help define and (we hope) ameliorate residual risk.

The pleiotropic effects attributed to statins are many.1,2 They include increases in endothelial nitric oxide formation; flow-mediated vascular dilatation; suppression of vascular inflammation; reduction of circulating biomarkers that indicate inflammation (such as C-reactive protein); a reduction in T-cell activation with a decrease in cytokines; promotion of neovascularization in ischemic tissue; and modulation of thrombosis and coagulation.

A review of some of the trials that evaluated the pleiotropic effects of statins will inform further understanding.

In the REVERSAL Trial3 and Substudy4 (Reversal of Atherosclerosis with Aggressive Lipid Lowering), 654 patients with known coronary artery disease received either atorvastatin(Drug information on atorvastatin), 80 mg/d, or pravastatin(Drug information on pravastatin), 40 mg/d. The primary end-point was a decrease in atheroma volume as measured by intravascular ultrasound (IVUS). After 18 months, not only was cholesterol lowering greater in the atorvastatin limb (see below), but C-reactive protein was also decreased more in the atorvastatin limb (36% lower than baseline with atorvastatin versus only 5% with pravastatin). The primary end point—atheroma progression—was compared in the two groups. Disease had not progressed in the atorvastatin-treated individuals, but it did in those taking pravastatin.

The next study in the REVERSAL series is critical to the inflammation-cardiovascular risk theory. In the substudy of REVERSE,4 LDL levels in the atorvastatin and pravastatin groups during therapy were 76.7 and 110.8 mg/dL, respectively. Using a similar follow-up technique, IVUS, vascular benefit (characterized as “constrictive wall remodeling”) was significantly correlated with reductions in C-reactive protein level from baseline through statin therapy, but not with changes from baseline in LDL-C or HDL-C values during statin therapy. Even though cholesterol lowering was of a greater magnitude in the atorvastatin recipients, the significant correlate with improvement was the drop in the inflammatory marker. The authors’ conclusion was that “Plaque-stabilizing therapy with statin medications . . . appears to be related to their anti-inflammatory effects.”

Lest one believe that REVERSAL is the only series to assess anti-inflammatory effects contingent to statins, a number of other, disparate “inflammatory” lesions have benefitted. These include renal function after acute coronary syndromes and heart catheterization5; outcomes after other percutaneous vascular procedures6; and remodeling/intimal hyperplasia after venous bypass grafts.7 This list is abbreviated significantly!

The best way to bring statin anti-inflammatory actions and cardiovascular disease back into focus would be to address risk reduction in disorders characterized by inflammation. HIV/AIDS is a good place to begin. Read my column on HIV/AIDS, Cardiovascular Disease, and Inflammation for more on that topic.

References


1. Babelova A, Sedding DG, Brandes RP. Anti-atherosclerotic mechanisms of statin therapy. Curr Opin Pharmacol. 2013;13:1-5.
2. Blum A, Shamburek R. The pleiotropic effects of statins on endothelial function, vascular inflammation, immunomodulation, and thrombogenesis. Atherosclerosis. 2009;203:325-330.
3. Nissen SE, Tuzcu EM, Schoenhagen P, et al. Effect of intensive compared with moderate lipid-lowering therapy on progression of coronary atherosclerosis: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 2004;291:1071-1080.
4. Schoenhagen P, Tuzcu M, Apperson-Hansen C, et al. Determinants of arterial wall remodeling during lipid-lowering therapy. Circulation. 2006;113:2826-2834.
5. Li W, Fu X, Li X. Beneficial effects of high-does atorvastatin pretreatment on renal function in patients with acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction undergoing emergency percutaneous coronary intervention. Cardiology. 2012;122:195-202.
6. Paraskevas KI, Athyros VG, Briana DD, et al. Statins exert multiple beneficial effects on patients undergoing percutaneous revascularization procedures. Curr Drug Targets. 2007;8:942-951.
7. Qiang B, Toma J, Fujii H, et al. Statin therapy prevents expansive remodeling in venous bypass grafts. Atherosclerosis. 2012;223:106-113. 
 

 

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by ERASTOTHENES DE ALEJANDRIA | March 15, 2013 7:42 AM EDT

These studies do not represent the reality nor are unbiased, apart from the fact that they added to the Statin to pleiotropic effects are not clear at all. Say this for several reasons that I will summarize and if you want to extend it, the hare with taste. 1 Two Statins are compared at different doses and with different powers, (poor outcome). 2. There are many studies that say the negative effects of cholesterol (inflammation, atherosclerosis, ischemia, elevation of the PCR), then how much more lower cholesterol less negative effects appear. Do both these pleiotropic effects will not be result of the own decrease in cholesterol?. If you want more ideas on how to investigate it, they say it.

More articles on Lipid Lowering

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Statins and Risk for Diabetes: Weighing the Evidence

What Are Pleiotropic Effects? The Role of Statins in Decreasing Inflammation

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Statins Linked to Exertional Fatigue in New Study






 
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