Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Dec 2018)

Ezetimibe in Combination With Simvastatin Reduces Remnant Cholesterol Without Affecting Biliary Lipid Concentrations in Gallstone Patients

  • Osman Ahmed,
  • Karin Littmann,
  • Ulf Gustafsson,
  • Camilla Pramfalk,
  • Katariina Öörni,
  • Lilian Larsson,
  • Mirko E. Minniti,
  • Staffan Sahlin,
  • German Camejo,
  • Paolo Parini,
  • Mats Eriksson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.118.009876
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 24

Abstract

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Background In randomized trials (SHARP [Study of Heart and Renal Protection], IMPROVE‐IT [Improved Reduction of Outcomes: Vytorin Efficacy International Trial]), combination of statin and ezetimibe resulted in additional reduction of cardiovascular events. The reduction was greater in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), where elevated remnant cholesterol and high cardiovascular disease risk is characteristic. To evaluate possible causes behind these results, 40 patients eligible for cholecystectomy, randomized to simvastatin, ezetimibe, combined treatment (simvastatin+ezetimibe), or placebo treatment during 4 weeks before surgery, were studied. Methods and Results Fasting blood samples were taken before treatment start and at the end (just before surgery). Bile samples and liver biopsies were collected during surgery. Hepatic gene expression levels were assessed with qPCR. Lipoprotein, apolipoprotein levels, and content of cholesterol, cholesteryl ester, and triglycerides were measured after lipoprotein fractionation. Lipoprotein subclasses were analyzed by nuclear magnetic resonance. Apolipoprotein affinity for human arterial proteoglycans (PG) was measured. Biomarkers of cholesterol biosynthesis and intestinal absorption and bile lipid composition were analyzed using mass spectrometry. Combined treatment caused a statistically significant decrease in plasma remnant particles and apolipoprotein B (ApoB)/lipoprotein content of cholesterol, cholesteryl esters, and triglycerides. All treatments reduced ApoB‐lipoprotein PG binding. Simvastatin and combined treatment modified the composition of lipoproteins. Changes in biomarkers of cholesterol synthesis and absorption and bile acid synthesis were as expected. No adverse events were found. Conclusions Combined treatment caused atheroprotective changes on ApoB‐lipoproteins, remnant particles, bile components, and in ApoB‐lipoprotein affinity for arterial PG. These effects might explain the decrease of cardiovascular events seen in the SHARP and IMPROVE‐IT trials. Clinical Trial Registration URL: www.clinicaltrialsregister.eu. Unique identifier: 2006‐004839‐30).

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