Adams Stephen P, Alaeiilkhchi Nima, Wright James M
Department of Anesthesiology, Pharmacology and Therapeutics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Faculty of Science, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2020 Jun 19;6(6):CD012735. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012735.pub2.
Pitavastatin is the newest statin on the market, and the dose-related magnitude of effect of pitavastatin on blood lipids is not known.
Primary objective To quantify the effects of various doses of pitavastatin on the surrogate markers: LDL cholesterol, total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol and triglycerides in participants with and without cardiovascular disease. To compare the effect of pitavastatin on surrogate markers with other statins. Secondary objectives To quantify the effect of various doses of pitavastatin on withdrawals due to adverse effects. SEARCH METHODS: The Cochrane Hypertension Information Specialist searched the following databases for trials up to March 2019: the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL, Issue 2, 2019), MEDLINE (from 1946), Embase (from 1974), the World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform, and ClinicalTrials.gov. We also contacted authors of relevant papers regarding further published and unpublished work. The searches had no language restrictions.
RCT and controlled before-and-after studies evaluating the dose response of different fixed doses of pitavastatin on blood lipids over a duration of three to 12 weeks in participants of any age with and without cardiovascular disease.
Two review authors independently assessed eligibility criteria for studies to be included, and extracted data. We entered data from RCT and controlled before-and-after studies into Review Manager 5 as continuous and generic inverse variance data, respectively. Withdrawals due to adverse effects (WDAE) information was collected from the RCTs. We assessed all included trials using the Cochrane 'Risk of bias' tool under the categories of allocation (selection bias), blinding (performance bias and detection bias), incomplete outcome data (attrition bias), selective reporting (reporting bias), and other potential sources of bias.
Forty-seven studies (five RCTs and 42 before-and-after studies) evaluated the dose-related efficacy of pitavastatin in 5436 participants. The participants were of any age with and without cardiovascular disease, and pitavastatin effects were studied within a treatment period of three to 12 weeks. Log dose-response data over doses of 1 mg to 16 mg revealed strong linear dose-related effects on blood total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol and triglycerides. There was no dose-related effect of pitavastatin on blood HDL cholesterol, which was increased by 4% on average by pitavastatin. Pitavastatin 1 mg/day to 16 mg/day reduced LDL cholesterol by 33.3% to 54.7%, total cholesterol by 23.3% to 39.0% and triglycerides by 13.0% to 28.1%. For every two-fold dose increase, there was a 5.35% (95% CI 3.32 to 7.38) decrease in blood LDL cholesterol, a 3.93% (95% CI 2.35 to 5.50) decrease in blood total cholesterol and a 3.76% (95% CI 1.03 to 6.48) decrease in blood triglycerides. The certainty of evidence for these effects was judged to be high. When compared to other statins for its effect to reduce LDL cholesterol, pitavastatin is about 6-fold more potent than atorvastatin, 1.7-fold more potent than rosuvastatin, 77-fold more potent than fluvastatin and 3.3-fold less potent than cerivastatin. For the placebo group, there were no participants who withdrew due to an adverse effect per 109 subjects and for all doses of pitavastatin, there were three participants who withdrew due to an adverse effect per 262 subjects.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Pitavastatin lowers blood total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol and triglyceride in a dose-dependent linear fashion. Based on the effect on LDL cholesterol, pitavastatin is about 6-fold more potent than atorvastatin, 1.7-fold more potent than rosuvastatin, 77-fold more potent than fluvastatin and 3.3-fold less potent than cerivastatin. There were not enough data to determine risk of withdrawal due to adverse effects due to pitavastatin.
匹伐他汀是市场上最新的他汀类药物,其降血脂作用与剂量的关系尚不清楚。
主要目的是量化不同剂量匹伐他汀对有或无心血管疾病参与者的替代指标(低密度脂蛋白胆固醇、总胆固醇、高密度脂蛋白胆固醇和甘油三酯)的影响,并将匹伐他汀对替代指标的影响与其他他汀类药物进行比较。次要目的是量化不同剂量匹伐他汀对因不良反应导致停药的影响。
Cochrane高血压信息专家检索了以下数据库以获取截至2019年3月的试验:Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL,2019年第2期)、MEDLINE(1946年起)、Embase(1974年起)、世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台和ClinicalTrials.gov。我们还联系了相关论文的作者以获取更多已发表和未发表的研究。检索无语言限制。
评估不同固定剂量匹伐他汀在3至12周内对有或无心血管疾病的任何年龄参与者血脂剂量反应的随机对照试验(RCT)和前后对照研究。
两名综述作者独立评估纳入研究的资格标准并提取数据。我们分别将RCT和前后对照研究的数据作为连续数据和通用逆方差数据输入Review Manager 5。从RCT中收集因不良反应导致停药(WDAE)的信息。我们使用Cochrane“偏倚风险”工具在分配(选择偏倚)、盲法(实施偏倚和检测偏倚)、不完整结局数据(失访偏倚)、选择性报告(报告偏倚)以及其他潜在偏倚来源等类别下评估所有纳入试验。
47项研究(5项RCT和42项前后对照研究)评估了匹伐他汀在5436名参与者中的剂量相关疗效。参与者有或无心血管疾病,年龄不限,匹伐他汀的作用在3至12周的治疗期内进行研究。1毫克至16毫克剂量的对数剂量反应数据显示,匹伐他汀对血液总胆固醇、低密度脂蛋白胆固醇和甘油三酯有强烈的线性剂量相关作用。匹伐他汀对血液高密度脂蛋白胆固醇无剂量相关作用,匹伐他汀平均使其升高4%。每天1毫克至16毫克的匹伐他汀使低密度脂蛋白胆固醇降低33.3%至54.7%,总胆固醇降低23.3%至39.0%,甘油三酯降低13.0%至28.1%。每增加两倍剂量,血液低密度脂蛋白胆固醇降低5.35%(95%CI 3.32至7.38),血液总胆固醇降低3.93%(95%CI 2.35至5.50),血液甘油三酯降低3.76%(95%CI 1.03至6.48)。这些作用的证据确定性被判定为高。与其他他汀类药物降低低密度脂蛋白胆固醇的作用相比,匹伐他汀的效力约为阿托伐他汀的6倍、瑞舒伐他汀的1.7倍、氟伐他汀的77倍、西立伐他汀的效力低3.3倍。对于安慰剂组,每109名受试者中没有因不良反应而停药的参与者,对于所有剂量的匹伐他汀,每262名受试者中有3名因不良反应而停药。
匹伐他汀以剂量依赖性线性方式降低血液总胆固醇、低密度脂蛋白胆固醇和甘油三酯。基于对低密度脂蛋白胆固醇的作用,匹伐他汀的效力约为阿托伐他汀的6倍、瑞舒伐他汀的1.7倍、氟伐他汀的77倍、西立伐他汀的效力低3.3倍。没有足够的数据来确定匹伐他汀导致因不良反应停药的风险。