Ziegler O, Drouin P
Service de Médecine Générale G, CHRU de Nancy, France.
Cardiology. 1990;77 Suppl 4:50-7. doi: 10.1159/000174683.
Five centers participated in a double-blind, randomized, active-drug controlled study. The selected patients had a diagnosis of primary hypercholesterolemia (phenotype IIa or IIb, total cholesterol [TC] greater than 300 mg/dl, low-density lipoprotein [LDL] cholesterol greater than 195 mg/dl, triglycerides [TG] less than 350 mg/dl). Throughout the study the patients observed a lipid-lowering diet (American Heart Association). After a baseline placebo period (4 weeks), the patients were randomly assigned to simvastatin 20 mg q.p.m. or fenofibrate 200 mg b.i.d. If after 6 weeks of treatment the LDL cholesterol level remained over 140 mg/dl the dose of simvastatin was doubled. The total duration of treatment was 10 weeks. One hundred eighty-four patients completed the study; age ranged from 17 to 72 years (mean 46; 129 men, 55 women). Seventy-nine patients had ischemic heart diseases. Simvastatin significantly reduces TC, LDL, and apolipoprotein (apo) B (30%, 35%, and 27%, respectively). These effects are larger than those of fenofibrate (19%, 22%, and 14%, respectively). Fenofibrate decreased very-low-density lipoprotein and TG, and increased high-density lipoprotein and apo A1, to a larger extent than simvastatin. However, the difference reached statistical significance only for TG (29% versus 17%). Both drugs were well tolerated. Clinical adverse experiences occurred with a low frequency, and few of these were considered drug related (6 and 8% in the simvastatin and fenofibrate groups, respectively). Only two patients had serious laboratory adverse experiences considered drug related or possibly drug related (one in each treatment group with increased SGPT, gamma-GT, and/or creatine phosphokinase).