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Submitted on February 11, 2008
From the Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands (M.V., S.I.v.L., E.S.S., J.J.P.K.); Julius Center for Health Sciences and Primary Care (M.L.B., D.E.G.) and Department of Vascular Medicine (F.L.V.), University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands; Westfries Gasthuis, Hoorn, The Netherlands (D.C.B.); Department of Internal Medicine, Erasmus University Medical Centre, Rotterdam, The Netherlands (E.J.S.); Division of Public Health Sciences, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC (G.W.E.); and Radboud University, Nijmegen Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands (A.F.S.). * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: j.j.kastelein{at}amc.uva.nl.
Background—Torcetrapib, an inhibitor of cholesteryl ester transfer protein, has been shown to increase the cardiovascular event rate despite conferring a significant high-density lipoprotein cholesterol increase. Using data from the Randomized Assessment of Digoxin on Inhibitors of the Angiotensin Converting Enzyme (RADIANCE) trials, which assessed the impact of torcetrapib on carotid intima-media thickness (cIMT), we sought to explore potential mechanisms underlying this adverse outcome. Methods and Results—Data from the RADIANCE 1 and 2 studies, which examined cIMT in 904 subjects with familial hypercholesterolemia and in 752 subjects with mixed dyslipidemia, were pooled. Subjects were randomized to either atorvastatin or torcetrapib combined with atorvastatin. Mean common cIMT progression was increased in subjects receiving torcetrapib plus atorvastatin compared with subjects receiving atorvastatin alone (0.0076±0.0011 versus 0.0025±0.0011 mm/y; P=0.0014). Subjects treated with torcetrapib plus atorvastatin displayed higher postrandomization systolic blood pressure and plasma sodium and bicarbonate levels in conjunction with lower potassium levels. The decrease in potassium levels was associated with the blood pressure increase. Markedly, the use of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors tended to aggravate the blood pressure increase. Subjects receiving torcetrapib plus atorvastatin with the strongest low-density lipoprotein cholesterol reduction showed the smallest cIMT progression, whereas subjects with the highest systolic blood pressure increase showed the largest cIMT progression. High-density lipoprotein cholesterol increase was not associated with cIMT change. Conclusions—These analyses support mineralocorticoid-mediated off-target toxicity in patients receiving torcetrapib as a contributing factor to an adverse outcome. The absence of an inverse relationship between high-density lipoprotein cholesterol change and cIMT progression suggests that torcetrapib-induced high-density lipoprotein cholesterol increase does not mediate atheroprotection. Future studies with cholesteryl ester transfer protein inhibitors without off-target toxicity are needed to settle this issue.
Accepted on September 19, 2008
Cholesteryl Ester Transfer Protein Inhibitor Torcetrapib and Off-Target Toxicity. A Pooled Analysis of the Rating Atherosclerotic Disease Change by Imaging With a New CETP Inhibitor (RADIANCE) Trials
Menno Vergeer MD,
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