Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol lowering by adding ezetimibe to statin is associated with improvement of postprandial hyperlipidemia in diabetic patients with coronary artery disease

2017 
Abstract Objective and methods We investigated the hypothesis that serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) reduction by ezetimibe is associated with the improvement in postprandial hyperlipidemia by performing an oral fat loading test before and 24weeks after ezetimibe treatment in diabetic (n=29) and non-diabetic (n=30) male patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). Results Serum LDL-C levels were significantly reduced by ezetimibe in both groups (diabetic, from 120.3±39.4 to 79.5±23.2mg/dL, p 0–6h TG) and RLP-C (∆AUC 0–6h RLP-C), they were significantly greater in diabetic than non-diabetic patients (∆AUC 0–6h TG, −28.9 vs. −12.2%, p=0.028; ∆AUC 0–6h RLP-C, −27.8 vs. −12.3%, p=0.007). In diabetic patients, ∆AUC 0–6h TG and ∆AUC 0–6h RLP-C in the highest tertile of serum LDL-C reduction were significantly greater than those in the lowest tertile (∆AUC 0-6h TG, −34.1 vs. −20.9%, p=0.012; ∆AUC 0-6h RLP-C, −34.5 vs. −15.1%, p=0.024). Conclusions These findings suggest that serum LDL-C reduction by ezetimibe might be associated with the improvement of postprandial hyperlipidemia in diabetic patients with CAD.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    25
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []