Reuters Health Information: Statins safe in NASH
Statins safe in NASH
Last Updated: 2017-06-16
By Marilynn Larkin
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Statin therapy is safe for
diabetic and prediabetic individuals with nonalcoholic
steatohepatitis (NASH), and should be encouraged, given these
patients� high risk of cardiovascular disease, researchers say.
Patients with NASH are often deprived of statin therapy due
to fear of inducing liver toxicity, Dr. Kenneth Cusi of the
University of Florida in Gainesville told Reuters Health. �(Our)
study provides the first long-term prospective evidence that
treatment with statins is safe in this population.�
Dr. Cusi and colleagues did a post-hoc analysis of statin
use during a randomized, controlled trial assessing pioglitzone
versus placebo, enrolling and following 101 patients with NASH
plus prediabetes or type 2 diabetes for up to three years.
Only 38 patients (37%) were on statins at enrollment despite
a high cardiovascular risk. The group receiving statins
consisted mostly of men (82%).
Statin users and non-statin users were similar at baseline
with respect to BMI, total body fat and presence of metabolic
syndrome, the team reported in the Journal of Clinical
Endocrinology and Metabolism, online June 1.
Statin users were slightly older (55 versus 48, p<0.001),
and trended towards a higher prevalence of type 2 diabetes (63%
versus 44%, p=0.07) compared with non-users. Statin users also
had lower plasma levels of total cholesterol (166 versus 196
mg/dl, p<0.001) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (93
versus 119 mg/dl, p<0.001); however, the groups did not differ
with respect to plasma triglyceride or high-density lipoprotein
cholesterol concentration.
Non-statin users had higher plasma alanine transaminase
levels but similar severity of liver disease at baseline. Four
participants in both the statin and non-statin groups had at
least a twofold increase in plasma aminotransferases during
follow-up. One non-statin user did not continue in the study
because of this elevation; values returned to normal without any
active intervention in the other cases.
No changes in liver histology or hepatic insulin resistance
were seen in those who were newly started on a statin compared
with those receiving placebo during the main study.
Although the findings need to be confirmed in larger
studies, Dr. Cusi said by email, �the take-home message is that
primary care doctors, endocrinologists and hepatologists should
be more proactive in prescribing statins, given their overall
safety and the very high cardiovascular risk of patients with
NASH.�
Dr. Gregg Fonarow, co-chief of the University of California,
Los Angeles Division of Cardiology, told Reuters Health, �There
have been concerns regarding the liver safety of statin
medications in patients with NASH. This new analysis finds no
evidence of worsening in liver function with the use of statin
and some studies have even suggested improved liver function.�
�These findings further reinforce the liver safety of statin
medications in a variety of clinical conditions,� he concluded.
�For most patients, the proven benefits of statins outweigh any
potential risks.�
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2sjpfkH
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2017.
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