10 — Medication Reference

Table of Contents

1.0 Medication Summary

Class Agent(s) Expected LDL-C Effect Route Key Consideration
HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitor (Statin) Atorvastatin, Rosuvastatin, others ↓ 30–55% PO daily First-line therapy
Cholesterol Absorption Inhibitor Ezetimibe ↓ 15–20% PO daily First add-on to statin
PCSK9 Monoclonal Antibody Evolocumab, Alirocumab ↓ 50–60% SC q2w or monthly Prior auth required
siRNA PCSK9 Inhibitor Inclisiran ↓ ~50% SC q6 months In-office injection; prior auth required
ACL Inhibitor Bempedoic acid ↓ 15–25% PO daily No muscle effects
ACL Inhibitor + Absorption Inhibitor Bempedoic acid/ezetimibe ↓ 35–40% PO daily Fixed-dose combination
Purified EPA Icosapent ethyl ↓ TG; ASCVD reduction PO BID Not a substitute for LDL-C lowering
Fibrate Fenofibrate, Gemfibrozil ↓ TG 30–50% PO daily/BID Pancreatitis prevention
Niacin Extended-release niacin ↓ 15–25%; ↓ Lp(a) 20–30% PO QHS Limited role; last-line

2.0 Statins

2.1 High-Intensity Statins (≥ 50% LDL-C Reduction)

Agent Dose Notes
Atorvastatin 40–80 mg daily No renal dose adjustment; take any time of day
Rosuvastatin 20–40 mg daily Most potent per mg; take any time of day; caution at 40 mg with Asian patients

2.2 Moderate-Intensity Statins (30–49% LDL-C Reduction)

Agent Dose Notes
Atorvastatin 10–20 mg daily
Rosuvastatin 5–10 mg daily
Simvastatin 20–40 mg daily Max 20 mg with amlodipine, diltiazem, amiodarone
Pravastatin 40–80 mg daily Not CYP3A4 metabolized; fewer drug interactions
Lovastatin 40–80 mg daily Take with evening meal
Fluvastatin XL 80 mg daily CYP2C9 metabolized
Pitavastatin 1–4 mg daily Minimal CYP metabolism; favorable diabetes risk profile [1]

2.3 Common Statin Drug Interactions

Interacting Drug Statins Affected Mechanism Action
Strong CYP3A4 inhibitors (itraconazole, ketoconazole, HIV protease inhibitors, clarithromycin) Atorvastatin, lovastatin, simvastatin ↑ Statin levels Avoid combination or switch to rosuvastatin/pravastatin/pitavastatin
Cyclosporine All statins Multiple mechanisms; ↑↑ statin levels Use lowest dose; prefer pravastatin or fluvastatin; monitor closely
Gemfibrozil All statins Inhibits glucuronidation; ↑ myopathy risk Contraindicated with statins — use fenofibrate instead [2]
Amlodipine Simvastatin CYP3A4 inhibition Max simvastatin 20 mg; or switch to atorvastatin/rosuvastatin
Diltiazem, verapamil Simvastatin, lovastatin CYP3A4 inhibition Max simvastatin 20 mg; consider alternative statin
Amiodarone Simvastatin, lovastatin CYP3A4 inhibition Max simvastatin 20 mg; consider alternative statin
Warfarin All statins (variable) CYP competition Monitor INR when starting/changing statin
Grapefruit juice (large quantities) Atorvastatin, lovastatin, simvastatin CYP3A4 inhibition Avoid large quantities; no interaction with rosuvastatin/pravastatin

2.4 Statin Monitoring

Parameter When
Lipid panel 4–8 weeks after start/change; then per follow-up cadence
ALT Baseline; only repeat if symptoms suggest hepatotoxicity
CK Not routine; check if myalgia symptoms
HbA1c / fasting glucose Periodically in patients with diabetes risk factors

2.5 Statin Safety

  • Hepatotoxicity: Rare clinically significant liver injury; mild ALT elevations (< 3× ULN) are common and do not require discontinuation [3]
  • New-onset diabetes: ~9% relative increase in diabetes incidence with high-intensity statins; absolute risk is small and outweighed by ASCVD benefit in indicated populations [4]
  • Myopathy: 1–5% incidence of myalgia; rhabdomyolysis is very rare (< 0.01%)
  • Cognitive effects: No causal link established in randomized trials [3]

3.0 Ezetimibe

Parameter Details
Brand name Zetia
Dose 10 mg daily (only available dose)
Administration With or without food; any time of day
Mechanism Inhibits NPC1L1-mediated cholesterol absorption at intestinal brush border
LDL-C reduction 15–20% as monotherapy; additive with statin
Key trial IMPROVE-IT: reduced CV events when added to simvastatin post-ACS [5]
Side effects Generally well-tolerated; rare GI symptoms, myalgia
Drug interactions Minimal; avoid with cholestyramine (reduces ezetimibe absorption)
Renal/hepatic No renal adjustment; avoid in active hepatic disease

4.0 PCSK9 Inhibitors

4.1 Evolocumab (Repatha)

Parameter Details
Dose 140 mg SC every 2 weeks or 420 mg SC monthly
Administration Prefilled syringe or SureClick autoinjector; patient self-administration after training
Storage Refrigerated (2–8°C); may store at room temperature (≤ 25°C) for up to 30 days
LDL-C reduction 55–60% when added to statin
Key trial FOURIER: 15% relative reduction in MACE over 2.2 years in stable ASCVD [6]
Side effects Injection site reactions (3–5%), nasopharyngitis, back pain
Monitoring Lipid panel 4–8 weeks after initiation
Prior auth Required — see 11 — Prior Authorization

4.2 Alirocumab (Praluent)

Parameter Details
Dose 75 mg SC every 2 weeks (may increase to 150 mg if LDL-C not at target)
Administration Prefilled pen; patient self-administration after training
Storage Refrigerated; may store at room temperature (≤ 25°C) for up to 30 days
LDL-C reduction 45–60% depending on dose
Key trial ODYSSEY Outcomes: 15% relative reduction in MACE post-ACS [7]
Side effects Similar to evolocumab
Monitoring Lipid panel 4–8 weeks; consider down-titration if LDL-C < 25 mg/dL
Prior auth Required — see 11 — Prior Authorization

5.0 Inclisiran (Leqvio)

Parameter Details
Dose 284 mg SC
Schedule Day 0 → Day 90 → every 6 months thereafter
Administration Healthcare provider administered (in-office injection, not self-administered)
Mechanism Small interfering RNA (siRNA) targeting hepatic PCSK9 mRNA
LDL-C reduction ~50% when added to statin
Key trials ORION-10, ORION-11: sustained LDL-C reduction through 18 months [8]
Side effects Injection site reactions (mild, transient)
Storage Refrigerated or room temperature (≤ 25°C); single-use prefilled syringe
Prior auth Required — see 11 — Prior Authorization
Advantage Eliminates adherence concerns with biannual in-office dosing

6.0 Bempedoic Acid

6.1 Bempedoic Acid (Nexletol)

Parameter Details
Dose 180 mg daily
Administration Oral; with or without food
Mechanism ATP-citrate lyase (ACL) inhibitor; prodrug activated in liver (not in skeletal muscle)
LDL-C reduction 15–25% as monotherapy; additive with statin and ezetimibe
Key trial CLEAR Outcomes: 13% MACE reduction in statin-intolerant patients [9]
Side effects Hyperuricemia/gout, tendon rupture (rare), ↑ creatinine
Monitoring Uric acid at baseline and periodically; creatinine
Drug interactions Simvastatin and pravastatin levels may increase (bempedoic acid inhibits OATP1B1) — limit simvastatin to 20 mg, pravastatin to 40 mg

6.2 Bempedoic Acid / Ezetimibe (Nexlizet)

Parameter Details
Dose 180 mg bempedoic acid / 10 mg ezetimibe daily
LDL-C reduction 35–40% combined
Advantage Single pill combining two non-statin agents; convenient for statin-intolerant patients
Same monitoring As bempedoic acid above

7.0 Icosapent Ethyl (Vascepa)

Parameter Details
Dose 2 g twice daily with food (total 4 g/day)
Mechanism Purified EPA ethyl ester; reduces TG, inflammation, platelet aggregation; membrane stabilization
Indication Established ASCVD or DM with ≥ 2 risk factors AND fasting TG 135–499 mg/dL on stable statin
Key trial REDUCE-IT: 25% relative reduction in MACE [10]
Side effects Atrial fibrillation/flutter (5.3% vs. 3.9%); bleeding risk; musculoskeletal pain
Drug interactions Monitor with anticoagulants (bleeding risk); no significant CYP interactions
Distinction Not interchangeable with OTC fish oil/omega-3 supplements

8.0 Fibrates

8.1 Fenofibrate (Tricor / Trilipix)

Parameter Details
Dose Fenofibrate 145 mg daily or fenofibric acid (Trilipix) 135 mg daily
Indication Severe hypertriglyceridemia (TG ≥ 500 mg/dL) for pancreatitis prevention
TG reduction 30–50%
Safety with statins Acceptable combination (does not inhibit statin glucuronidation) [2]
Renal dosing Contraindicated if eGFR < 30; dose reduce if eGFR 30–59
Monitoring Renal function (may ↑ creatinine); hepatic panel; CBC
Other effects ↑ HDL-C 10–20%; modest ↓ LDL-C 5–15%; ↑ cholelithiasis risk

8.2 Gemfibrozil (Lopid)

Parameter Details
Dose 600 mg twice daily, 30 min before meals
Statin interaction Contraindicated with all statins due to myopathy/rhabdomyolysis risk [2]
Use Only when fibrate is needed and patient is NOT on a statin
Monitoring CK if combined with other medications; hepatic/renal function

9.0 Niacin (Extended-Release)

Parameter Details
Dose Start 500 mg QHS; titrate by 500 mg q4 weeks; max 2000 mg
Formulation Extended-release only (Niaspan); immediate-release has higher hepatotoxicity risk
LDL-C effect ↓ 15–25%
TG effect ↓ 20–50%
HDL-C effect ↑ 15–35%
Lp(a) effect ↓ 20–30% (one of few agents that lowers Lp(a))
Side effects Flushing (60–70%; mitigate with aspirin 325 mg 30 min prior), hepatotoxicity, hyperglycemia, hyperuricemia, GI symptoms
Monitoring Hepatic panel q6–12 weeks during titration; fasting glucose/HbA1c; uric acid
Limited role AIM-HIGH [11] and HPS2-THRIVE [12] showed no ASCVD benefit when added to statin; use as last-line only
Potential niche Markedly elevated Lp(a) when all other options exhausted

10.0 Excluded Agents

10.1 Bile Acid Sequestrants

Cholestyramine, colestipol, and colesevelam are not used at this clinic due to:

  • Poor gastrointestinal tolerability (bloating, constipation, nausea)
  • Multiple drug interactions (bind other medications in the GI tract)
  • Triglyceride elevation
  • Availability of better-tolerated alternatives with superior outcomes data

10.2 Nutraceuticals

Nutraceuticals such as plant sterols/stanols, red yeast rice, bergamot, berberine, and omega-3 supplements are not included in this clinic’s therapeutic plan. These agents lack sufficient randomized controlled trial evidence for ASCVD event reduction.

10.3 Investigational Agents

Obicetrapib (CETP inhibitor) and Lp(a)-targeted therapies (muvalaplin, lepodisiran, olpasiran) are not currently included. These may be incorporated in future versions as trial data and regulatory approvals emerge.

11.0 Drug Interaction Quick Reference

Drug A Drug B Interaction Action
Any statin Gemfibrozil ↑↑ Myopathy/rhabdo risk Contraindicated
Simvastatin/lovastatin Strong CYP3A4 inhibitors ↑↑ Statin levels Switch to rosuvastatin or pravastatin
Simvastatin Amlodipine ↑ Simvastatin levels Max simvastatin 20 mg
Bempedoic acid Simvastatin OATP1B1 inhibition Max simvastatin 20 mg
Bempedoic acid Pravastatin OATP1B1 inhibition Max pravastatin 40 mg
Icosapent ethyl Anticoagulants ↑ Bleeding risk Monitor for bleeding
Cyclosporine All statins ↑↑ Statin levels Use lowest statin dose; close monitoring
Fibrate + statin Fenofibrate preferred Gemfibrozil contraindicated Never use gemfibrozil with statin
Ezetimibe Cholestyramine ↓ Ezetimibe absorption Avoid combination

12.0 Version History

Version Date Description
1.0.0 2026-03-30 Initial release

References

  1. Yokote K, Shimano H, Urashima M, et al. Efficacy and safety of pitavastatin in Japanese patients with hypercholesterolemia (LIVES study). Circ J. 2009;73(8):1466–1472.
  2. Jacobson TA. Myopathy with statin–fibrate combination therapy: clinical considerations. Nat Rev Endocrinol. 2009;5(9):507–518.
  3. Newman CB, Preiss D, Tobert JA, et al. Statin safety and associated adverse events: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2019;39(2):e52–e81.
  4. Sattar N, Preiss D, Murray HM, et al. Statins and risk of incident diabetes: a collaborative meta-analysis of randomised statin trials. Lancet. 2010;375(9716):735–742.
  5. Cannon CP, Blazing MA, Giugliano RP, et al. Ezetimibe added to statin therapy after acute coronary syndromes (IMPROVE-IT). N Engl J Med. 2015;372(25):2387–2397.
  6. Sabatine MS, Giugliano RP, Keech AC, et al. Evolocumab and clinical outcomes in patients with cardiovascular disease (FOURIER). N Engl J Med. 2017;376(18):1713–1722.
  7. Schwartz GG, Steg PG, Szarek M, et al. Alirocumab and cardiovascular outcomes after acute coronary syndrome (ODYSSEY Outcomes). N Engl J Med. 2018;379(22):2097–2107.
  8. Ray KK, Wright RS, Kallend D, et al. Two phase 3 trials of inclisiran in patients with elevated LDL cholesterol (ORION-10 and ORION-11). N Engl J Med. 2020;382(16):1507–1519.
  9. Nissen SE, Lincoff AM, Brennan D, et al. Bempedoic acid and cardiovascular outcomes in statin-intolerant patients (CLEAR Outcomes). N Engl J Med. 2023;388(15):1353–1364.
  10. Bhatt DL, Steg PG, Miller M, et al. Cardiovascular risk reduction with icosapent ethyl for hypertriglyceridemia (REDUCE-IT). N Engl J Med. 2019;380(1):11–22.
  11. AIM-HIGH Investigators. Niacin in patients with low HDL cholesterol levels receiving intensive statin therapy. N Engl J Med. 2011;365(24):2255–2267.
  12. HPS2-THRIVE Collaborative Group. Effects of extended-release niacin with laropiprant in high-risk patients. N Engl J Med. 2014;371(3):203–212.

© 2026 The Sandusky Dyslipidemia Model. For clinical decision support only. Not a substitute for clinical judgment.