Golomb Beatrice A, Evans Marcella A
Department of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, California 92093-0995, USA.
Am J Cardiovasc Drugs. 2008;8(6):373-418. doi: 10.2165/0129784-200808060-00004.
HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (statins) are a widely used class of drug, and like all medications, have potential for adverse effects (AEs). Here we review the statin AE literature, first focusing on muscle AEs as the most reported problem both in the literature and by patients. Evidence regarding the statin muscle AE mechanism, dose effect, drug interactions, and genetic predisposition is examined. We hypothesize, and provide evidence, that the demonstrated mitochondrial mechanisms for muscle AEs have implications to other nonmuscle AEs in patients treated with statins. In meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials (RCTs), muscle AEs are more frequent with statins than with placebo. A number of manifestations of muscle AEs have been reported, with rhabdomyolysis the most feared. AEs are dose dependent, and risk is amplified by drug interactions that functionally increase statin potency, often through inhibition of the cytochrome P450 3A4 system. An array of additional risk factors for statin AEs are those that amplify (or reflect) mitochondrial or metabolic vulnerability, such as metabolic syndrome factors, thyroid disease, and genetic mutations linked to mitochondrial dysfunction. Converging evidence supports a mitochondrial foundation for muscle AEs associated with statins, and both theoretical and empirical considerations suggest that mitochondrial dysfunction may also underlie many nonmuscle statin AEs. Evidence from RCTs and studies of other designs indicates existence of additional statin-associated AEs, such as cognitive loss, neuropathy, pancreatic and hepatic dysfunction, and sexual dysfunction. Physician awareness of statin AEs is reportedly low even for the AEs most widely reported by patients. Awareness and vigilance for AEs should be maintained to enable informed treatment decisions, treatment modification if appropriate, improved quality of patient care, and reduced patient morbidity.
HMG-CoA还原酶抑制剂(他汀类药物)是一类广泛使用的药物,与所有药物一样,具有产生不良反应(AE)的可能性。在此,我们回顾他汀类药物不良反应的文献,首先聚焦于肌肉不良反应,因为这是文献报道和患者提及最多的问题。我们研究了有关他汀类药物肌肉不良反应机制、剂量效应、药物相互作用和遗传易感性的证据。我们提出假设并提供证据,证明已证实的肌肉不良反应的线粒体机制对接受他汀类药物治疗的患者的其他非肌肉不良反应也有影响。在随机对照试验(RCT)的荟萃分析中,他汀类药物引起的肌肉不良反应比安慰剂更常见。已经报道了肌肉不良反应的多种表现形式,其中横纹肌溶解最为可怕。不良反应具有剂量依赖性,药物相互作用通常通过抑制细胞色素P450 3A4系统在功能上增加他汀类药物的效力,从而放大风险。他汀类药物不良反应的一系列其他风险因素是那些放大(或反映)线粒体或代谢脆弱性的因素,如代谢综合征因素、甲状腺疾病以及与线粒体功能障碍相关的基因突变。越来越多的证据支持与他汀类药物相关的肌肉不良反应具有线粒体基础,理论和实证考虑均表明线粒体功能障碍也可能是许多非肌肉他汀类药物不良反应的潜在原因。来自随机对照试验和其他设计研究的证据表明存在其他与他汀类药物相关的不良反应,如认知丧失、神经病变及胰腺和肝功能障碍以及性功能障碍。据报道,即使对于患者报告最多的不良反应,医生对他汀类药物不良反应的认知度也很低。应保持对不良反应的认识和警惕,以便做出明智的治疗决策,在适当情况下调整治疗方案,提高患者护理质量,并降低患者发病率。