Limit Use of 80 mg Simvastatin
The Food
and Drug Administration is recommending that the use of drugs containing 80 mg
of simvastatin—the highest approved dose of the popular cholesterol-lowering
statin—be sharply curtailed because of the risk of muscle injury.
FDA says
this dose should only be used by patients who have been taking it for 12 months
or longer without ill effect.
“Our
overall goal is to get doctors to not start patients on 80 mg of simvastatin,”
says Eric Colman, M.D., deputy director of FDA’s Division of Metabolism and
Endocrinology Products.
And if
health care professionals find that patients now taking 40 mg of simvastatin
aren’t meeting their LDL cholesterol goal, FDA is advising them to choose a
different statin rather than raising the simvastatin dose to 80 mg, says Amy
Egan, M.D., deputy director for safety in the FDA division.
All
statins, despite their proven benefit in lowering the risk of heart attacks and
strokes, carry some risk of an injury called myopathy, characterized by
unexplained muscle weakness or pain.
But the
risk is greater for patients who take the 80 mg doses of simvastatin,
especially in the first year of treatment. Colman says the muscle damage is
often caused by interactions with other medications. And some people are
genetically predisposed towards simvastatin-related myopathy, he says.
Last
year, an estimated 2.1 million people were prescribed a medication containing
80 mg of simvastatin, says Egan. “It is the most potent statin available in
generic form and is relatively inexpensive,” she notes.
The
statin is sold under the brand name Zocor and as a single-ingredient generic
drug. It is also sold in combination with ezetimibe as Vytorin, and niacin as
Simcor.
FDA has
revised the drug labels for simvastatin and Vytorin to include the new
restrictions for the 80 mg dose, says Egan. The labels of simvastatin, Vytorin
and Simcor have all been changed to include dosing recommendations when these
drugs are used with medicines that can increase the level of simvastatin in the
body, thus increasing the risk of myopathy.
Like all
statins, simvastatin is used to lower the amount of low-density lipoprotein
(LDL) cholesterol—known as “bad cholesterol”—in the blood. And the 80 mg dose
of simvastatin has been shown to lower LDL cholesterol by an additional 6% over
the 40 mg dose.
But
myopathy can be debilitating. Moreover, a rare form of myopathy, called
rhabdomyolysis, can lead to kidney failure and death.
Colman
says one thing FDA does not want patients to do is stop taking their statins
without consulting their doctor. “The benefits of the treatment far outweigh
the risks,” he says, calling occurrences of rhabdomyolysis “extremely rare.”
But Egan
says you should contact your health care professional if you have:
·
Muscle pain, tenderness or weakness
·
Dark or red-colored urine
·
Unexplained fatigue
The FDA
recommendation was prompted by a comprehensive review of clinical trial data
and data from the agency’s Adverse Event Reporting System, one of FDA's most
important tools for tracking the safety of drugs once they are on the market.
Egan
explained that FDA did not want to risk the health of patients who have been
successfully treated with the medication for a year or more by pulling it off
the market. During the next year, the agency will monitor prescription data to
determine if the labeling changes are successful in limiting the use of 80 mg
simvastatin.
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