Statins

Statins are HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors and are first-line therapy for LDL reduction and prevention of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD).

They are outcome-driven therapies.

Primary Benefits:

Greater LDL reduction correlates directly with greater event reduction.


Mechanism of Action

Primary Target:

Physiologic Effects:

Net Result:


Complete Statin Master Table

Drug Dose Range Intensity LDL Reduction CYP Metabolism Lipophilicity
Atorvastatin 10–80 mg Moderate–High 35–60% CYP3A4 Lipophilic
Rosuvastatin 5–40 mg Moderate–High 45–63% Minimal CYP2C9 Hydrophilic
Simvastatin 10–40 mg Low–Moderate 25–45% CYP3A4 Lipophilic
Pravastatin 10–80 mg Low–Moderate 20–40% No CYP Hydrophilic
Lovastatin 10–40 mg Low–Moderate 25–40% CYP3A4 Lipophilic
Fluvastatin 20–80 mg Low–Moderate 20–35% CYP2C9 Lipophilic
Pitavastatin 1–4 mg Moderate 30–45% Minimal CYP Lipophilic

Intensity Classification (Clinical Anchor)

Intensity Expected LDL Reduction Drugs
High-Intensity ≥50% Atorvastatin 40–80 mg; Rosuvastatin 20–40 mg
Moderate-Intensity 30–49% Lower-dose Atorvastatin; Rosuvastatin 5–10 mg; Simvastatin; Pravastatin; Lovastatin; Pitavastatin
Low-Intensity <30% Low-dose Simvastatin; Pravastatin; Lovastatin

Clinical rule: Intensity selection is based on ASCVD risk — not LDL number alone.


Pharmacokinetic Considerations

High Interaction Risk (CYP3A4):

Lower Interaction Risk:

Hydrophilic (less muscle penetration):

Lipophilic:


Class Adverse Effects

Muscle:

Hepatic:

Metabolic:

Risk Factors for Myopathy:


Clinical Strategy

Primary Prevention:

Secondary Prevention:

Statins are foundational therapy. Other lipid agents are additive.


High-Yield Pearls


Continue Lipid Therapy:

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