TY - JOUR
T1 - Bezafibrate and simvastatin combination therapy for diabetic dyslipidaemia
T2 - Efficacy and safety
AU - Gavish, D.
AU - Leibovitz, E.
AU - Shapira, I.
AU - Rubinstein, A.
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - Objective. To determine the efficacy and safety of a statin-fibrate combination in diabetes patients. Design. An open 21-month trial in which each patient first received the single drug for 6 months and then a combination of the two for 1 year. Setting. Three lipid clinics in university-based tertiary care hospitals. Patients. One hundred and forty- eight patients with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent, NIDDM) diabetes mellitus under stable control for 3 months by means of diet and oral hypoglycaemic medication. Intervention. Patients from one clinic (n = 48) received bezafibrate slow release (400 mg day-1), and patients from the other two clinics (n = 100) received simvastatin 20 mg day-1. Six months later, all patients were switched to a daily combination of 400 mg bezafibrate slow release and 20 mg simvastatin for 1 year. Results. The combination of statin and fibrate led to a 23% reduction in total cholesterol, 42% reduction in triglycerides, 29% reduction in LDL-c, 25% increase in HDL-c, 10% decrease in fibrinogen and 19% reduction of Lp(a) levels, and a decrease in the cholesterol/HDL-c ratio (from 8.9 to 5.4) in all 148 patients. Cardiovascular (CV) event rate was significantly reduced from 9.5% during the first 6 months of the study to less than 2% during the last year of the study (whilst on combination Rx). Side-effects with all treatments included only two patients who developed myopathy when on the combined regimen and one on the single statin regimen. However, plasma creatinine phosphokinase (CPK) levels doubled (but remained within the normal range) in most of the patients on combination therapy, compared with only a mild increase in patients receiving a single medication. Conclusions. The statin and fibrate combination was found to be more efficacious than a single medication for treatment of diabetic dyslipidaemia, as evidenced by improvement in the lipoprotein profile, reductions in Lp(a), fibrinogen and CV event rate, and almost no clinically significant side-effects.
AB - Objective. To determine the efficacy and safety of a statin-fibrate combination in diabetes patients. Design. An open 21-month trial in which each patient first received the single drug for 6 months and then a combination of the two for 1 year. Setting. Three lipid clinics in university-based tertiary care hospitals. Patients. One hundred and forty- eight patients with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent, NIDDM) diabetes mellitus under stable control for 3 months by means of diet and oral hypoglycaemic medication. Intervention. Patients from one clinic (n = 48) received bezafibrate slow release (400 mg day-1), and patients from the other two clinics (n = 100) received simvastatin 20 mg day-1. Six months later, all patients were switched to a daily combination of 400 mg bezafibrate slow release and 20 mg simvastatin for 1 year. Results. The combination of statin and fibrate led to a 23% reduction in total cholesterol, 42% reduction in triglycerides, 29% reduction in LDL-c, 25% increase in HDL-c, 10% decrease in fibrinogen and 19% reduction of Lp(a) levels, and a decrease in the cholesterol/HDL-c ratio (from 8.9 to 5.4) in all 148 patients. Cardiovascular (CV) event rate was significantly reduced from 9.5% during the first 6 months of the study to less than 2% during the last year of the study (whilst on combination Rx). Side-effects with all treatments included only two patients who developed myopathy when on the combined regimen and one on the single statin regimen. However, plasma creatinine phosphokinase (CPK) levels doubled (but remained within the normal range) in most of the patients on combination therapy, compared with only a mild increase in patients receiving a single medication. Conclusions. The statin and fibrate combination was found to be more efficacious than a single medication for treatment of diabetic dyslipidaemia, as evidenced by improvement in the lipoprotein profile, reductions in Lp(a), fibrinogen and CV event rate, and almost no clinically significant side-effects.
KW - Cardiovascular event
KW - Combination therapy
KW - Diabetic dyslipidaemia
KW - Fibrate
KW - Statin
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0034127122&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1046/j.1365-2796.2000.00646.x
DO - 10.1046/j.1365-2796.2000.00646.x
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AN - SCOPUS:0034127122
SN - 0954-6820
VL - 247
SP - 563
EP - 569
JO - Journal of Internal Medicine
JF - Journal of Internal Medicine
IS - 5
ER -