Details
Stereochemistry | RACEMIC |
Molecular Formula | C24H25FNO4.Na |
Molecular Weight | 433.4478 |
Optical Activity | ( + / - ) |
Defined Stereocenters | 2 / 2 |
E/Z Centers | 1 |
Charge | 0 |
SHOW SMILES / InChI
SMILES
[Na+].CC(C)N1C(\C=C\[C@H](O)C[C@H](O)CC([O-])=O)=C(C2=C1C=CC=C2)C3=CC=C(F)C=C3
InChI
InChIKey=ZGGHKIMDNBDHJB-RPQBTBOMSA-M
InChI=1S/C24H26FNO4.Na/c1-15(2)26-21-6-4-3-5-20(21)24(16-7-9-17(25)10-8-16)22(26)12-11-18(27)13-19(28)14-23(29)30;/h3-12,15,18-19,27-28H,13-14H2,1-2H3,(H,29,30);/q;+1/p-1/b12-11+;/t18-,19-;/m0./s1
Fluvastatin is an antilipemic agent that competitively inhibits hydroxymethylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase. Fluvastatin is marketed under the trade names Lescol, Canef, Vastin. LESCOL/LESCOL XL is an HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor (statin) indicated as
an adjunctive therapy to diet to:
Reduce elevated TC, LDL-C, Apo B, and TG, and to increase HDL-C in adult
patients with primary hypercholesterolemia and mixed dyslipidemia
Reduce elevated TC, LDL-C, and Apo B levels in boys and post-menarchal
girls, 10 to 16 years of age, with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia
after failing an adequate trial of diet therapy
Reduce the risk of undergoing revascularization procedures in patients with
clinically evident CHD
Slow the progression of atherosclerosis in patients with CHD.
Fluvastatin selectively and competitively inhibits the hepatic enzyme hydroxymethylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase. HMG-CoA reductase is responsible for converting HMG-CoA to mevalonate, the rate-limiting step in cholesterol biosynthesis. Inhibition results in a decrease in hepatic cholesterol levels which stimulates the synthesis of LDL receptors and increases hepatic uptake of LDL cholesterol. The end result is decreased levels of plasma total and LDL cholesterol.
Originator
Sources: http://adisinsight.springer.com/drugs/800000409
Curator's Comment: # Novartis
Approval Year
Targets
Primary Target | Pharmacology | Condition | Potency |
---|---|---|---|
Target ID: CHEMBL402 |
28.0 nM [IC50] | ||
Target ID: CHEMBL4605 Sources: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15846457 |
337.0 µM [IC50] |
Conditions
Condition | Modality | Targets | Highest Phase | Product |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | LESCOL Approved UseLESCOL/LESCOL XL is an HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor (statin) indicated as
an adjunctive therapy to diet to:
Reduce elevated TC, LDL-C, Apo B, and TG, and to increase HDL-C in adult
patients with primary hypercholesterolemia and mixed dyslipidemia (1.1)
Reduce elevated TC, LDL-C, and Apo B levels in boys and post-menarchal
girls, 10 to 16 years of age, with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia
after failing an adequate trial of diet therapy (1.1)
Reduce the risk of undergoing revascularization procedures in patients with
clinically evident CHD (1.2)
Slow the progression of atherosclerosis in patients with CHD (1.2) Launch Date1993 |
|||
Primary | LESCOL Approved UseLESCOL/LESCOL XL is an HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor (statin) indicated as
an adjunctive therapy to diet to:
Reduce elevated TC, LDL-C, Apo B, and TG, and to increase HDL-C in adult
patients with primary hypercholesterolemia and mixed dyslipidemia (1.1)
Reduce elevated TC, LDL-C, and Apo B levels in boys and post-menarchal
girls, 10 to 16 years of age, with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia
after failing an adequate trial of diet therapy (1.1)
Reduce the risk of undergoing revascularization procedures in patients with
clinically evident CHD (1.2)
Slow the progression of atherosclerosis in patients with CHD (1.2) Launch Date1993 |
|||
Primary | LESCOL Approved UseLESCOL/LESCOL XL is an HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor (statin) indicated as
an adjunctive therapy to diet to:
Reduce elevated TC, LDL-C, Apo B, and TG, and to increase HDL-C in adult
patients with primary hypercholesterolemia and mixed dyslipidemia (1.1)
Reduce elevated TC, LDL-C, and Apo B levels in boys and post-menarchal
girls, 10 to 16 years of age, with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia
after failing an adequate trial of diet therapy (1.1)
Reduce the risk of undergoing revascularization procedures in patients with
clinically evident CHD (1.2)
Slow the progression of atherosclerosis in patients with CHD (1.2) Launch Date1993 |
Cmax
Value | Dose | Co-administered | Analyte | Population |
---|---|---|---|---|
205 μg/mL EXPERIMENT https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29368187 |
20 mg single, oral dose: 20 mg route of administration: Oral experiment type: SINGLE co-administered: |
FLUVASTATIN plasma | Homo sapiens population: HEALTHY age: ADULT sex: FEMALE / MALE food status: FASTED |
AUC
Value | Dose | Co-administered | Analyte | Population |
---|---|---|---|---|
206.2 μg × h/mL EXPERIMENT https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29368187 |
20 mg single, oral dose: 20 mg route of administration: Oral experiment type: SINGLE co-administered: |
FLUVASTATIN plasma | Homo sapiens population: HEALTHY age: ADULT sex: FEMALE / MALE food status: FASTED |
T1/2
Value | Dose | Co-administered | Analyte | Population |
---|---|---|---|---|
0.54 h EXPERIMENT https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29368187 |
20 mg single, oral dose: 20 mg route of administration: Oral experiment type: SINGLE co-administered: |
FLUVASTATIN plasma | Homo sapiens population: HEALTHY age: ADULT sex: FEMALE / MALE food status: FASTED |
Doses
Dose | Population | Adverse events |
---|---|---|
640 mg 1 times / day multiple, oral Highest studied dose Dose: 640 mg, 1 times / day Route: oral Route: multiple Dose: 640 mg, 1 times / day Sources: Page: p.505 |
unhealthy, ADULT n = 7 Health Status: unhealthy Condition: lipid metabolism disorder Age Group: ADULT Sex: M+F Food Status: FED Population Size: 7 Sources: Page: p.505 |
Overview
CYP3A4 | CYP2C9 | CYP2D6 | hERG |
---|---|---|---|
OverviewOther
Drug as perpetrator
Target | Modality | Activity | Metabolite | Clinical evidence |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8737761/ Page: 3.0 |
moderate [IC50 100 uM] | |||
no | ||||
no | ||||
no | ||||
not significant | ||||
weak [Ki 94.3 uM] | ||||
yes [IC50 20 uM] | ||||
yes [IC50 26.3 uM] | ||||
yes [IC50 5.79 uM] | ||||
yes [Ki 0.3 uM] | ||||
Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15955871/ Page: 5.0 |
yes [Ki 5.43 uM] | |||
Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8937853/ |
yes |
Drug as victim
Target | Modality | Activity | Metabolite | Clinical evidence |
---|---|---|---|---|
major | yes (co-administration study) Comment: Coadministration with rifampicin (CYP2C9 inducer) increased the CL/F of fluvastatin by 95% and to reduce AUC by 50%. |
|||
minor | ||||
minor | ||||
minor | ||||
minor | unknown (co-administration study) Comment: Coadministration with cyclocporine resulted in 3.1-fold increase in AUC; however, cannot be explained through these mechanisms, since neither pravastatin nor fluvastatin has been shown to be a substrate for either P-gp or CYP3A4; coadministration with itraconazole had no significant impact on Cmax and AUC of fluvastatin |
|||
no | ||||
no | ||||
no | ||||
no | ||||
no | ||||
no | ||||
Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11368292/ Page: 14.0 |
no | unknown (co-administration study) Comment: Coadministration with cyclocporine resulted in 3.1-fold increase in AUC; however, cannot be explained through these mechanisms, since neither pravastatin nor fluvastatin has been shown to be a substrate for either P-gp or CYP3A4 Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11368292/ Page: 14.0 |
||
yes | ||||
yes | ||||
yes | unlikely (co-administration study) Comment: coadministered with rifampin. See https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29768081/. Pharmacogenomic study also performed. Not significant: see https://www.lipidjournal.com/article/S1933-2874(14)00072-5/pdf Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17470528/ |
|||
yes | yes (pharmacogenomic study) Comment: AUC of drug increased by 72% |
PubMed
Title | Date | PubMed |
---|---|---|
Efficacy and safety of a combination fluvastatin-bezafibrate treatment for familial hypercholesterolemia: comparative analysis with a fluvastatin-cholestyramine combination. | 1994 May |
|
Troglitazone upregulates LDL receptor activity in HepG2 cells. | 1998 Aug |
|
Postural hypotension induced by paroxetine. | 1998 Feb 21 |
|
[Cardiology in 1997]. | 1998 Oct 5 |
|
Statin + fibrate combination therapy fluvastatin with bezafibrate or ciprofibrate in high risk patients with vascular disease. | 1999 Jun 1 |
|
Preclinical and clinical pharmacology of Rosuvastatin, a new 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitor. | 2001 Mar 8 |
|
Regional intestinal absorption and biliary excretion of fluvastatin in the rat: possible involvement of mrp2. | 2004 Sep-Oct |
|
Bile salt export pump (BSEP/ABCB11) can transport a nonbile acid substrate, pravastatin. | 2005 Aug |
|
Identification of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors as activators for human, mouse and rat constitutive androstane receptor. | 2005 Jul |
|
Evaluation of the anti-HIV activity of statins. | 2005 Oct 14 |
|
Binding thermodynamics of statins to HMG-CoA reductase. | 2005 Sep 6 |
|
Inhibitors of the mevalonate pathway as potential therapeutic agents in multiple myeloma. | 2007 Mar |
|
Interference with bile salt export pump function is a susceptibility factor for human liver injury in drug development. | 2010 Dec |
|
A gene score of nine LDL and HDL regulating genes is associated with fluvastatin-induced cholesterol changes in women. | 2010 Mar |
|
Effects of add-on fluvastatin therapy in patients with chronic proteinuric nephropathy on dual renin-angiotensin system blockade: the ESPLANADE trial. | 2010 Nov |
|
Identification of old drugs as potential inhibitors of HIV-1 integrase - human LEDGF/p75 interaction via molecular docking. | 2012 Dec |
|
Detection of statin cytotoxicity is increased in cells expressing the OATP1B1 transporter. | 2013 Jul |
|
ATP-dependent transport of statins by human and rat MRP2/Mrp2. | 2013 Jun 1 |
|
Drug-Induced Acute Liver Injury Within 12 Hours After Fluvastatin Therapy. | 2016 Jan-Feb |
Sample Use Guides
In Vivo Use Guide
Sources: https://www.drugs.com/dosage/fluvastatin.html
Usual Adult Dose for Hyperlipidemia
Immediate Release Capsules:
-Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) reduction to a goal of 25% or greater: Initial dose of 40 mg orally once a day in the evening or 40 mg orally twice a day
-LDL-C reduction to a goal of less than 25%: Initial dose of 20 mg orally once a day
-Maintenance dose: 20 mg to 80 mg per day
Usual Adult Dose for Hyperlipoproteinemia Type IIa (Elevated LDL)
Immediate Release Capsules:
-Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) reduction to a goal of 25% or greater: Initial dose of 40 mg orally once a day in the evening or 40 mg orally twice a day
-LDL-C reduction to a goal of less than 25%: Initial dose of 20 mg orally once a day
-Maintenance dose: 20 mg to 80 mg per day
Route of Administration:
Oral
In Vitro Use Guide
Sources: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11273020
Fluvastatin markedly inhibits the formation of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances in iron (II)-supported peroxidation of liposomes with IC50 of 12 uM. Fluvastatin ranging from 1 uM to 100 uM inhibits peroxyl radical-mediated peroxidation of liposomes induced by water-soluble and lipid-soluble radical generators, 2,2'-azobis (2-amidinopropane) dihydro-chloride and 2,2'-azobis (2,4-dimethylvaleronitrile), respectively.
Name | Type | Language | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Official Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Brand Name | English | ||
|
Brand Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Brand Name | English | ||
|
Brand Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Brand Name | English | ||
|
Brand Name | English | ||
|
Code | English | ||
|
Brand Name | English | ||
|
Code | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Brand Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Brand Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English | ||
|
Common Name | English |
Classification Tree | Code System | Code | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
NCI_THESAURUS |
C1655
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
Code System | Code | Type | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
PYF7O1FV7F
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | |||
|
SUB02243MIG
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | |||
|
DTXSID3044758
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | |||
|
23679527
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | |||
|
5137
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | |||
|
1285931
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | |||
|
C29062
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | |||
|
m5515
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | Merck Index | ||
|
72875
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | RxNorm | ||
|
DBSALT000088
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | |||
|
BB-10
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | |||
|
PYF7O1FV7F
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | |||
|
93957-55-2
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | |||
|
38561
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY | |||
|
CHEMBL2220442
Created by
admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023 , Edited by admin on Sat Dec 16 05:15:17 GMT 2023
|
PRIMARY |
ACTIVE MOIETY
SUBSTANCE RECORD