Zocor
Zocor
Generic Name
Zocor
Brand Names
is a triumph of early statin marketing; it is now extensively generic and cost‑effective, often the first line in lipid protocols.
Mechanism
- Competitive inhibition of hepatic HMG‑CoA reductase, the rate‑limiting enzyme in cholesterol biosynthesis.
- ↓ intracellular cholesterol → ↑ LDL‑receptor expression on hepatocytes → enhanced clearance of plasma LDL‑cholesterol.
- Modest reductions in VLDL, triglycerides, and raise HDL‑cholesterol.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption: Oral, peak plasma concentration (Tmax) ~4–6 h; absorption reduced by a high‑fat meal.
- Bioavailability: 35 % (highly variable; first‑pass metabolism by CYP3A4).
- Protein binding: ~85 % (primarily to albumin).
- Metabolism: Extensive hepatic oxidation via CYP3A4 → inactive metabolites.
- Half‑life: Terminal plasma t½ ≈ 2 h; the active metabolite has a t½ 4–12 h.
- Excretion: <5 % unchanged in urine; biliary excretion dominates.
- Drug interactions: Strongly inhibited by CYP3A4 inhibitors (ketoconazole, ritonavir, clarithromycin) → ↑ simvastatin levels → ↑ myopathy risk.
- Food interactions: Take with a low‑fat meal; avoid grapefruit juice.
Indications
- Primary hypercholesterolemia (familial or non‑familial).
- Mixed dyslipidemia with elevated LDL.
- Secondary prevention of cardiovascular events in patients with a history of MI, stroke, peripheral arterial disease, or diabetes.
- Esthetic and risk‑reduction therapy in patients with high LDL (>190 mg/dL).
Contraindications
- Contraindications:
- Concomitant use with potent CYP3A4 inhibitors.
- Active liver disease (elevated ALT/AST >3× ULN).
- Pregnancy or lactation.
- Known hypersensitivity to simvastatin.
- Warnings:
- Myopathy – especially rhabdomyolysis with concomitant myotoxic agents (e.g., fibrates).
- Hepatotoxicity – monitor LFTs; discontinue if ALT/AST >3× ULN.
- Drug‑drug interactions – avoid co‑administering with azoles, macrolides, protease inhibitors.
- Renal impairment: Usually safe, but monitor.
Dosing
- Initial adult dose:
- 10 mg once daily (morning) → 20 mg if tolerated.
- Titrate to ≤80 mg daily based on lipid goal achievement.
- Elderly: Start at 10 mg, titrate slowly.
- Children 12–17 y: 10 mg daily 3–4 y; 20 mg daily 4–7 y; 10 mg twice daily 7–12 y.
- Surgical patients: Hold 24 h pre‑operative; resume 24 h post‑op if no bleeding.
- Administration: Oral, with or without food; avoid high‑fat meals.
Adverse Effects
- Common:
- Muscle aches, cramps, fatigue.
- GI upset (nausea, diarrhea, abdominal pain).
- Headache, mild rash.
- Serious:
- Rhabdomyolysis (CK > 10× ULN).
- Hepatotoxicity (ALT/AST > 3× ULN).
- Stroke (rare, not statistically significant).
- Birth defects if used in pregnancy (fetal demyelination).
Monitoring
| Parameter | Frequency | Rationale |
| LFTs (ALT/AST) | Baseline, 4–12 weeks, then every 3–12 months if stable | Detect hepatotoxicity |
| CK | Symptom‑driven | Screen for myopathy |
| Lipid panel | Baseline, 4–12 weeks, then every 6–12 months | Assess LDL target attainment |
| Renal function | Baseline, then annually | Not a major issue but notes for combined therapy |
| HbA1c (diabetes) | Baseline, annually | Statins may modestly raise glucose levels |
Clinical Pearls
- Take it at night? The hepatic cholesterol synthesis peaks overnight; dosing in the evening may improve LDL reduction, but recent trials show little difference—time of day can be patient‑preferrable.
- High‑fat meal caution: A single high‑fat meal can halve bioavailability – educate patients to keep meals low‑fat.
- Drug‑drug labyrinth: Avoid ritonavir/clarithromycin/ketoconazole; if avoidance impossible, lower the simvastatin dose to 10 mg.
- Elderly & CKD: Start low/toxic dosing. Cross‑check renal function, consider rosuvastatin or atorvastatin for higher potency.
- Pregnancy test: Since simvastatin is category X, confirm pregnancy status before initiation in women of childbearing potential.
- Muscle pain red‑flag: Any unexplained myalgia with elevated CK warrants stopping the drug; monitor for rhabdo.
- Liver‑K correlation: An LFT rise 2–4 weeks post‑initiate often resolves; persistent >3× ULN needs drug discontinuation.
- Patent portfolio: Zocor’s brand name is a triumph of early statin marketing; it is now extensively generic and cost‑effective, often the first line in lipid protocols.
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• *This drug card is intended for educational purposes and does not replace clinical judgement. Always consult up‑to‑date prescribing information and institutional guidelines.*