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Clinical experience with lovastatin

1990 
Abstract New information on the tolerability of lovastatin has emerged from an ongoing study of long-term therapy; preliminary results from a large, 48-week clinical trial; and spontaneous reports of adverse events observed during prescription use of the drug in the United States. As of June 1989, 744 patients had received lovastatin for an average duration of 3.6 years in the long-term study. Drug-attributable adverse events necessitated withdrawal of 17 patients (2.3%) from the study. These adverse effects were asymptomatic elevations of transaminases (10), skin rash (3), gastrointestinal symptoms (2), myopathy (1) and insomnia (1). No effect of lovastatin on the human lens was observed. In the 48-week study, 8,245 patients were randomized into 5 equal groups to receive placebo or lovastatin 20 or 40 mg once or twice daily on a double-blind basis. Only 3 cases of myopathy were observed, all in patients taking lovastatin 40 mg twice daily. The incidence of withdrawal from the study because of raised transaminases was approximately 0.1% in the placebo group vs 0.1, 0.7, 0.6 and 1.5% in patients taking lovastatin in doses of 20 mg once daily, 40 mg once daily, 20 mg twice daily and 40 mg twice daily, respectively. Lovastatin has been available in the United States since September 1987. By June 1989, the drug had been prescribed for approximately 1 million patients. Drug-attributable adverse events not observed in clinical trials (such as hypersensitivity reactions and symptomatic hepatitis) have been reported, but the incidence of each appears to be extremely low.
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