Effects of Colestipol Alone and in Combination With Simvastatin on Apolipoprotein B Metabolism

Author:

Gaw Allan1,Packard Christopher J.1,Lindsay Grace M.1,Murray Elizabeth F.1,Griffin Bruce A.1,Caslake Muriel J.1,Colquhoun Ian1,Wheatley David J.1,Lorimer A. Ross1,Shepherd James1

Affiliation:

1. From the Institute of Biochemistry (A.G., C.J.P., G.M.L., E.F.M., B.A.G., M.J.C., J.S.), Department of Cardiac Surgery (I.C., D.J.W.), and the Department of Medical Cardiology (A.R.L.), Glasgow Royal Infirmary, Glasgow, UK.

Abstract

Abstract The effects of colestipol therapy alone (20 g/d) or combined with simvastatin (20 mg/d) were examined in a group of eight male patients with primary moderate hypercholesterolemia (total cholesterol ≥6.5 mmol/L [≥250 mg/dL]) who had undergone coronary artery bypass grafting more than 3 months previously. Colestipol therapy decreased total cholesterol by 14% ( P <.001) and LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) by 23% ( P <.001), while dual therapy decreased total cholesterol by 38% and LDL-C by 52% (both P <.001 versus baseline). No significant changes were observed in plasma triglyceride, VLDL cholesterol, or HDL cholesterol levels. VLDL subfraction turnovers were conducted at baseline and again on each regimen. ApoB kinetic parameters derived from a multicompartmental model suggested that colestipol therapy resulted in an expansion of the total VLDL apoB pool (36%, P <.05) that was largely due to a fall in the clearance rate of VLDL 1 apoB (49%), while the LDL apoB pool decreased 23% as a result of diminished direct LDL input. The model used also revealed that addition of simvastatin to the resin therapy caused increases in the fractional transfer rates of VLDL 2 to IDL and IDL to LDL together with a 37% increment in the LDL apoB fractional catabolic rate. Compared with baseline, combined therapy generated falls in both IDL (35%, P =.01) and LDL (37%, P <.04) apoB pools due to enhanced clearance of IDL (214%, P <.03) and reduced total input of LDL (39%, P <.003).

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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