Anti-inflammatory effect of statin is continuously working throughout use: a prospective three time point 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging study.
Min-Kyu KangChan Joon KimEun-Ho ChooEun Ji HanByung-Hee HwangJin-Jin KimSung Hoon KimJoo Hyun OKiyuk ChangPublished in: The international journal of cardiovascular imaging (2019)
No data exist whether statins have robust anti-inflammatory effects of atherosclerotic plaques primarily during the early treatment period or continuously throughout use. This prospective three time point 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (18F-FDG PET/CT) study of the carotid artery assessed anti-inflammatory effects of statin during the early treatment period (initiation to 3 months) and late treatment period (3 months to 1 year) and their correlation with lipid and inflammatory profile changes during a year of therapy. Nine statin-naïve stable angina patients with inflammatory carotid plaques received 20 mg/day atorvastatin after undergoing initial 18F-FDG PET/CT scanning of carotid arteries and ascending thoracic aorta, and then completed serial 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging at 3 and 12 months whose data were analyzed. The primary outcome was the inter-scan percent change in target-to-background ratio (ΔTBR) within the index vessel. At 3 months of atorvastatin treatment, mean serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) level decreased by 36.4% to < 70 mg/dL (p = 0.001) and mean serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol level increased to > 40 mg/dL (p = 0.041), with both maintained with no further reduction up to 1 year (p = 0.516 and 0.715, respectively) while mean serum high sensitivity C-reactive protein level only numerically decreased (p = 0.093). The index vessel ΔTBR showed continuous plaque inflammation reduction over 1 year, by 4.4% (p = 0.015) from the initiation to 3rd months and 6.2% (p = 0.009) from 3rd months to 1 year, respectively, without correlation with lipid profile changes. The ΔTBR of the bilateral carotid arteries and ascending aorta also continuously decreased from 3 months to 1 year. Three time point 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging demonstrates that statin's anti-inflammatory effect continues throughout its use up to 1 year, even though yielding stable below-target plasma LDL-C levels at 3 months.
Keyphrases
- computed tomography
- positron emission tomography
- anti inflammatory
- coronary artery disease
- high resolution
- cardiovascular disease
- pulmonary artery
- coronary artery
- magnetic resonance imaging
- pet ct
- spinal cord
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- aortic valve
- bone marrow
- spinal cord injury
- electronic health record
- low density lipoprotein
- magnetic resonance
- artificial intelligence
- big data
- blood flow
- electron microscopy