Unbound PubMed MEDLINE

Hyperlipidaemia and cardiovascular disease: do fibrates have a role? Current opinion in lipidology [Curr Opin Lipidol] Journal article

TitleHyperlipidaemia and cardiovascular disease: do fibrates have a role?
Author(s)Saha SA, Arora RR 
InstitutionProvidence Sacred Heart Medical Center, Spokane, WA 99220-2555, USA. sahas@uw.edu
SourceCurr Opin Lipidol 2011 Aug; 22(4):270-6.
MeSHCardiovascular Diseases
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2
Diabetic Retinopathy
Drug Therapy, Combination
Fibric Acids
Humans
Hyperlipidemias
Meta-Analysis as Topic
Microvessels
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
AbstractFibrates continue to be a viable treatment option for mixed atherogenic dyslipidemia, and recent reports from clinical studies have shed new light on the therapeutic utility of fibrates for the prevention of microvascular and macrovascular disease, especially in combination with statins.Data from randomized placebo-controlled trials have shown that fibrates reduce nonfatal coronary events but do not confer any benefit on mortality or other adverse cardiovascular outcomes. The ACCORD Lipid trial studied the additive effect of fenofibrate therapy along with low-dose simvastatin therapy in 5,518 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus, and found that fenofibrate did not affect any of the adverse cardiovascular outcomes, either individually or as part of a composite outcome, after 4.7 years of follow-up. An a priori subgroup analysis showed a significant benefit from fenofibrate-simvastatin combination therapy over simvastatin alone in participants with moderate hypertriglyceridemia and low HDL-cholesterol on major cardiovascular events, consistent with post-hoc analyses of previous fibrate trials. The ACCORD-Eye study adds to the sparse clinical data on the effect of fenofibrate on diabetic retinopathy, and showed that fenofibrate may be used to reduce the risk of progression of diabetic retinopathy even in patients with established disease. The combination of statin and fibrate was well tolerated.Fibrate therapy does not reduce mortality but may reduce nonfatal coronary events in patients at risk for cardiovascular disease, including those with type 2 diabetes. The ACCORD Lipid study shows that the combination of low-dose simvastatin and fenofibrate is well tolerated, and is potentially cardioprotective in patients with atherogenic 'mixed' dyslipidemia.
Languageeng
Pub Type(s)Journal Article
Review
PubMed ID21519250