C. Contacos et al., EFFECT OF PRAVASTATIN AND OMEGA-3-FATTY-ACIDS ON PLASMA-LIPIDS AND LIPOPROTEINS IN PATIENTS WITH COMBINED HYPERLIPIDEMIA, Arteriosclerosis and thrombosis, 13(12), 1993, pp. 1755-1762
This study compared the effects of a 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzy
me A reductase inhibitor, fish oil, and placebo on plasma lipids and l
ipoproteins in patients with mixed hyperlipidemia. After an initial ru
n-in phase, 32 patients were randomized for 6 weeks to either (1) prav
astatin 40 mg/d, n=10; (2) fish oil (himega 6 g/d, equivalent to 3 g o
mega-3 fatty acids/d), n=10; or (3) placebo. After single drug therapy
, in the pravastatin group mean total plasma cholesterol (TC), low-den
sity lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), and apolipoprotein (ape) B fell
significantly by 23% (P<.001), 30% (P<.001), and 26% (P<.01), respecti
vely. LDL Stokes' diameter did not change. In the fish oil group mean
plasma triglycerides (TG) fell 30% (P<.05), LDL Stokes' diameter incre
ased from 25.0 to 25.9 nm (P<.05), and there was a nonsignificant incr
ease in LDL-C. There were no changes in the placebo group. To assess t
he effect of the combination of pravastatin plus fish oil therapy, all
patients, except one woman from the placebo group who developed nause
a on fish oil, then took combined therapy of pravastatin 40 mg/d plus
fish oil 6 g/d for an additional 12 weeks. In each case, there were no
clinically significant episodes of muscle tenderness or elevation of
creatine phosphokinase or alanine aminotransferase. After 12 weeks of
combined therapy of pravastatin plus fish oil, there were significant
reductions in the mean TC, TG, LDL-C, and apoB in the three groups com
pared with baseline levels. High-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-
C) and apoA-I did not change on any single or combined drug therapy. T
he effect of drug therapy on lipoprotein fractions was also determined
. Lipoproteins of intermediate-density lipoprotein (IDL; Svedberg flot
ation units [S-f] 12 to 60) and very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL; S-
f>60) were isolated by ultracentrifugation. With pravastatin treatment
, the concentration of VLDL and IDL did not change significantly, even
though there was a trend toward a lower concentration of IDL lipids.
With fish oil, the concentration of VLDL lipids fell significantly by
at least 37% (P<.05), whereas IDL remained unchanged. However, combine
d therapy of pravastatin plus fish oil reduced the concentration of bo
th VLDL and IDL by at least 35% (both P<.01). In addition, combined th
erapy reduced the TC-to-TG ratio in VLDL by 25% (P<.05). These results
showed that in patients with mixed hyperlipidemia pravastatin lowered
TC more than TG, whereas fish oil lowered TG but not TC. The combinat
ion of pravastatin plus fish oil reduced both TC and TG and appeared s
afe to use in the short term. Fish oil decreased the concentration of
VLDL. However, the combination of pravastatin and fish oil effectively
reduced the concentration of VLDL and IDL.