4.3 Article

Targeting High Density Lipoproteins in the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease?

期刊

CURRENT CARDIOLOGY REPORTS
卷 14, 期 6, 页码 684-691

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11886-012-0317-3

关键词

Lipids; HDL; Reverse cholesterol transport; Niacin; GPR109A; Cholesteryl ester transfer protein; CETP; Anacetrapib; Torcetrapib; Dalcetrapib; Evacetrapib; ApoA-I; Recombinant HDL; RVX-208; Liver X receptor; miR-33; Cardiovascular disease

资金

  1. National Center for Research Resources [TL1RR024133]
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [TL1R000138]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Recent studies involving HDL-raising therapeutics have greatly changed our understanding of this field. Despite effectively raising HDL-C levels, niacin remains of uncertain clinical benefit. Synthetic niacin receptor agonists are unlikely to raise HDL-C or have other beneficial effects on plasma lipids. Despite the failure in phase 3 of 2 CETP inhibitors, 2 potent CETP inhibitors that raise HDL-C levels by >100 % (and reduce LDL-C substantially) are in late stage clinical development. Infusions of recombinant HDL containing 'wild-type' apoA-I or apoA-I Milano, as well as autologous delipidated HDL, all demonstrated promising early results, and remain in clinical development. A small molecule that causes upregulation of endogenous apoA-I production is also in clinical development. Finally, upregulation of macrophage cholesterol efflux pathways through agonism of liver X receptors or antagonism of miR-33 remains of substantial interest. The field of HDL therapeutics is poised to transition from the 'HDL-cholesterol hypothesis' to the 'HDL flux hypothesis' in which the impact on flux from macrophage to feces is deemed to be of greater therapeutic benefit than the increase in steady-state concentrations of HDL cholesterol.

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