Abstract
Following the recent demonstration that both cholestyramine and nicotinic acid decrease mortality from coronary heart disease, there is a new enthusiasm for hypolipidaemic therapy. The agents in current use are, however, insufficiently active or are accompanied by unacceptable side effects. An understanding of the mode of action is necessary, both to optimize treatment guidelines (e.g. regarding combination therapy or use in specific subsets of patients) and to develop new agents with preferred actions on rate-limiting steps. A reduction in LDL cholesterol concentration remains the principal desired action, although an elevation in HDL may also be beneficial. The main categories of commercially available agent comprise the anion exchange resins (inhibitors of bile acid absorption); cholesterol absorption inhibitors; fibrates (probably acting by enhancing lipoprotein lipase); and probucol (affecting LDL clearance). The most interesting of the new agents in clinical trials are the beta-hydroxy-beta-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase inhibitors, but other types of agent are at an earlier stage of evaluation, e.g. acyl-CoA: cholesterol acyltransferase inhibitors and peptide cofactors. It is not yet certain whether all the approaches to cholesterol lowering have equal validity, although an effect on biological endpoints is obtained for a variety of agents. Future evaluation will be aided by the implementation of noninvasive methods to quantify atherosclerosis and by the use of simple, 'dry-chemistry', cholesterol assays to screen populations.
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