Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P17174 (aspartate aminotransferase)
14,872 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Preliminary data suggest that fluvastatin may be safely combined with fibrates. The Fluvastatin Alone and in Combination Treatment Study examined the effects on plasma lipids and safety of a combination of fluvastatin and bezafibrate in patients with coronary artery disease and mixed hyperlipidaemia. A total of 333 patients were randomly allocated in this multicentre double-blind trial to receive 40 mg fluvastatin alone (n=80), 400 mg bezafibrate (n=86), 20 mg fluvastatin+400 mg bezafibrate (n=85) or 40 mg fluvastatin+400 mg bezafibrate (n=82) for 24 weeks. Low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol decreased >20% in all fluvastatin-containing regimens, with significantly greater decreases compared with bezafibrate alone (P<0.001). Bezafibrate alone and fluvastatin+bezafibrate combinations resulted in greater increases in high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol and decreases in triglycerides compared with fluvastatin alone (P<0.001). Fluvastatin (40 mg)+bezafibrate was the most effective for all lipid parameters with a decrease from baseline at endpoint in LDL-cholesterol of 24%, a decrease in triglycerides of 38% and an increase in HDL-cholesterol of 22%. All treatments were well tolerated with no increase in adverse events for combination therapy versus monotherapy, or between combination regimens. No clinically relevant liver (aspartate aminotransferase [ASAT] or alanine aminotransferase [ALAT]) greater than three times the upper limit of normal) or muscular (creatine phosphokinase (CPK) greater than four times the upper limit of normal) laboratory abnormalities were reported. This large study shows 40 mg fluvastatin in combination with 400 mg bezafibrate to be highly effective and superior to either drug given as monotherapy in mixed hyperlipidaemia, and to be safe and well tolerated.
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PMID:Efficacy and safety of a combination of fluvastatin and bezafibrate in patients with mixed hyperlipidaemia (FACT study). 1129 92

Recent studies of the effectiveness of ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) therapy in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) reported that UDCA therapy did not necessarily stop the progression of liver fibrosis in all patients, even those with early stage PBC. Thus, there is a need for more effective treatments that could prevent asymptomatic PBC from progressing to the icteric stage. Bezafibrate is effective in approximately two-thirds of non-icteric patients who have not shown a complete response to UDCA. Serum bilirubin, aspartate aminotransferase and gamma-guanosine 5'-triphosphate levelswere significantly lower in patients who responded to additional bezafibrate on univariate analysis. The putative mechanism by which bezafibrate acts in cholestasis is by increasing phospholipid output into bile, which forms micelles with the hydrophobic bile acid that reduces its toxicity.
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PMID:Fibrate for treatment of primary biliary cirrhosis. 1793 Dec 14