Abstract

Elevated levels of circulating microparticles (MPs) may contribute to the high cardiovascular risk in diabetes mellitus (DM) and chronic kidney disease (CKD). Therefore, we investigated the effects of lipid-lowering treatment (LLT) with simvastatin alone (S) or with ezetimibe (S+E) on MPs in DM patients with or without CKD. After a placebo run-in period, 18 DM patients with an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) of 15-59 mL/min (CKD stages 3-4) (DM-CKD) and 21 DM patients with eGFR >75 mL/min (DM-only) were treated with S and S+E in a randomized, double-blind, crossover study. MPs from platelets, monocytes and endothelial cells (PMPs, MMPs and EMPs), and their expression of phosphatidylserine (PS), P-selectin, CD40 ligand (CD40L) and tissue factor (TF) were measured by flow cytometry. At baseline, all types of MPs, except TF-positive MMPs, were elevated in DM-CKD compared with DM-only patients. All MPs, regardless of origin and phenotype, were inversely correlated with eGFR. S reduced the expression of P-selectin, TF and CD40L on PMPs and of TF on MMPs in both patient groups. S+E had no further effect. S also reduced total PS-positive procoagulant MPs, PMPs and MMPs in DM-CKD but not in DM-only patients. DM patients with CKD stages 3-4 had elevated PMPs, EMPs and MMPs compared with DM patients with normal GFR. Simvastatin reduced procoagulant MPs, MMPs and PMPs in DM-CKD patients, suggesting a beneficial reduction of hypercoagulability in this high-risk patient group. Differences between DM-CKD and DM-only patients were counteracted by LLT.

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