他汀类药物和糖尿病。

Rafael Carmena, D John Betteridge
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引用次数: 20

摘要

脂质异常在糖尿病患者心血管风险升高中起重要作用。糖尿病性血脂异常的主要成分是血浆甘油三酯升高,高密度脂蛋白胆固醇浓度低,小而致密的低密度脂蛋白占优势,餐后血脂过高。小而致密的低密度脂蛋白、残余富甘油三酯脂蛋白颗粒的升高和低密度脂蛋白是最有力的致动脉粥样硬化成分。这三种因素的共存,强烈地加剧了动脉壁脂质积聚和动脉粥样硬化斑块的形成。最近,《预防动脉粥样硬化性血管疾病协调临床指南》回顾了糖尿病在心血管风险评估中的地位。一般来说,糖尿病患者患心血管疾病的风险较高,但绝对风险因糖尿病类型、年龄和人群基线风险而异。成人治疗计划III (ATP III)和美国心脏协会已将糖尿病指定为高危疾病,并建议强化危险因素管理。关于治疗靶点,ATP III和美国糖尿病协会(ADA)指南都将低密度脂蛋白胆固醇列为降脂的首要目标,最佳水平设定在2.6 mmol/L (100 mg/dL)以下。来自具有里程碑意义的二级预防研究的有力证据表明,糖尿病患者的低密度脂蛋白降低与显著的临床益处相关。他汀类药物治疗2型糖尿病的益处不容置疑。正在进行的临床试验将有助于澄清以下问题:在低密度脂蛋白水平(低于3.4 mmol/L或130 mg/dL)的情况下,使用贝特类药物增加高密度脂蛋白胆固醇是否比单独使用他汀类药物更有益。2型糖尿病患者风险降低治疗的新模式侧重于心血管疾病的预防,而不仅仅是血糖或脂质控制。治疗性生活方式的改变被认为是治疗高血糖和共存代谢综合征的主要方法,超过一半的2型糖尿病患者可以诊断出高血糖和代谢综合征。2型糖尿病血脂管理的新观点应该考虑到胰岛素抵抗、脂肪分解增加和大的、浮力的、极低密度脂蛋白颗粒的过量产生是糖尿病血脂异常的基础。因此,应该开发在极低密度脂蛋白组装的调节步骤中起作用的药物。过氧化物酶体增殖物激活受体α (ppar α)的激活,发生在贝特类药物中,降低游离脂肪酸(FFAs)和甘油三酯水平。如噻唑烷二酮所证明的,PPARgamma激动作用增加甘油三酯脂解、FFA运输和FFA转化为甘油三酯。由于单独激活pparα和pparγ可改善脂质代谢,因此整合pparα和pparγ活性的新药(ppar - α / γ激动剂)的开发有望进一步改善胰岛素抵抗、FFA代谢,从而改善动脉粥样硬化性糖尿病血脂异常。
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Statins and diabetes.

Lipid abnormalities play an important part in raising the cardiovascular risk in diabetic subjects. The main components of diabetic dyslipidemia are increased plasma triglycerides, low concentration of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, preponderance of small, dense low-density lipoprotein, and excessive postprandial lipemia. Small, dense low-density lipoprotein, the elevation in remnant triglyceride-rich lipoprotein particles, and the low high-density lipoprotein are the most powerful atherogenic components. The coexistence of these three factors strongly aggravates the lipid accumulation in the arterial wall and the formation of atherosclerotic plaques. The position of diabetes in cardiovascular risk assessment has been recently reviewed in the Harmonized Clinical Guidelines on Prevention of Atherosclerotic Vascular Disease. In general, patients with diabetes carry a high risk for cardiovascular disease, but the absolute risk varies depending on the type of diabetes, age, and population baseline risk. The Adult Treatment Program III (ATP III) and the American Heart Association have designated diabetes as a high-risk condition and recommended intensive risk-factor management. Concerning therapeutic targets, both ATP III and the American Diabetes Association (ADA) guidelines have identified low-density lipoprotein cholesterol as the first priority of lipid lowering, and the optimal level was set at less than 2.6 mmol/L (100 mg/dL). There is strong evidence, coming from landmark secondary prevention studies, that LDL lowering in people with diabetes is associated with significant clinical benefits. The benefits of statin therapy in type 2 diabetics can no longer be questioned. Ongoing clinical trials will help clarify the question of whether increasing high-density lipoprotein cholesterol with fibrates in the presence of low low-density lipoprotein levels (lower than 3.4 mmol/L, or 130 mg/dL) will be more beneficial than statin therapy alone. The new paradigms in risk-reduction therapies for type 2 diabetic subjects are focused on cardiovascular disease prevention, rather than only on glucose or lipid control. Therapeutic lifestyle changes are considered primary therapies for hyperglycemia and coexisting metabolic syndrome, which can be diagnosed in more than half of type 2 diabetes subjects. New perspectives of lipid management in type 2 diabetes should take into account that insulin resistance, increased lipolysis, and overproduction of large, buoyant, very low density lipoprotein particles are at the base of diabetic dyslipidemia. Accordingly, drugs acting in the regulatory steps of very low density lipoprotein assembly should be developed. Activation of peroxisome proliferator activated receptor alpha (PPARalpha), as occurs with fibrates, lowers free fatty acids (FFAs) and triglyceride levels. PPARgamma agonism, as demonstrated by the thiazolidinediones, increases triglyceride lipolysis, FFA transport, and conversion of FFAs to triglycerides. As separate activation of PPARalpha and PPARgamma improves lipid metabolism, the development of new drugs integrating PPARalpha and PPARgamma activity (PPAR-alpha/gamma agonists) is a promising line that may further improve insulin resistance, FFA metabolism, and consequently, atherogenic diabetic dyslipidemia.

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