Abstract
The inverse relation between coronary artery disease and the concentration of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) is well established. A low HDL-C concentration is frequently accompanied by the features of the metabolic syndrome found in patients with type 2 diabetes and in individuals who are abdominally obese. Results from 3 independent trials are consistent in showing that fenofibrate is able to increase HDL-C levels across a wide range of dyslipidemic states. The HDL-C-increasing effect of fenofibrate is proportionately greater when baseline levels are low. Comparing results from published trials, the absolute increase in HDL-C produced by fenofibrate is greater than that with statins across all baseline HDL-C levels, and a 40-mg/dL treatment target HDL-C level is more likely to be achieved with fenofibrate therapy. Fenofibrate has favorable pleiotropic effects on several features of the metabolic syndrome, which are likely to explain the clinical benefits of fibrate therapy, beyond an impact on HDL-C levels. The additional reciprocal beneficial effect of fenofibrate in lowering low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) benefits those patients with low HDL-C and moderately increased LDL-C; the American Diabetes Association now recommends fibrate therapy in this case. Another trial, the Diabetes Atherosclerosis Intervention Study (DAIS) has also provided angiographic evidence to show that fenofibrate treatment may slow coronary artery disease progression in type 2 diabetes. Treatment effects on apolipoproteins suggest that not all fibrates affect HDL-C to an equal degree. A trial with fenofibrate focusing on coronary artery disease risk and mortality reduction in patients with type 2 diabetes that is currently under way, the Fenofibrate Intervention and Event Lowering in Diabetes (FIELD) trial is expected to report in 2005.
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