Add-on Therapy of EPA Reduces Oxidative Stress and Inhibits the Progression of Aortic Stiffness in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease and Statin Therapy: A Randomized Controlled Study

2011 
AIM: We examined the anti-oxidant mechanisms of combined therapy of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) plus statin on the progression of atherosclerosis. METHODS: Patients receiving statin therapy for dyslipidemia and with coronary artery disease (CAD) were assigned randomly in an open-label manner to the EPA (1,800 mg/day) -plus-statin group (n= 25; combined-therapy group) or to the statin-only group (n= 25), and followed for 48 weeks. At baseline and 48 weeks after enrollment, oxidative stress, brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (baPWV) and stiffness parameter β-index of the carotid were measured. RESULTS: The lipid profile remained unchanged throughout the study. Although the median value of baPWV increased more in the statin-only group than in the combined-therapy group, this difference was not significant (p= 0.29); however, a decrease in baPWV was associated with combined-therapy treatment by multiple regression analysis adjusted for age and mean blood pressure (p= 0.04). In addition, the β-index of the carotid was lower in the combined-therapy group than in the statin-only group (p= 0.02). Furthermore, although the difference in the reduction of the urinary concentration of 8-isoprostane between the two groups did not reach statistical significance, this concentration was significantly lower in the combined-therapy group with higher baseline levels (≥ 183 pg/mL · Cr) of urinary 8-isoprostane (p= 0.004). CONCLUSIONS: EPA may reduce oxidative stress and inhibit the progression of arterial stiffness more efficiently than statin-only therapy in patients with dyslipidemia and CAD.
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