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CETP inhibition in cardiovascular risk management: a critical appraisal (vol 37, pg 90, 2007)

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TLDR
In this paper, the effect of cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) on HDL cholesterol was investigated in a large-scale phase III clinical trial, with torcetrapib being only evaluated in combination therapy with atorvastatin.
Abstract
In view of the cardioprotective effect of high‐density lipoproteins (HDL) and the limited effects of statin and fibrate therapy on HDL cholesterol, it is clinically relevant to test whether pharmacological treatment aimed at raising HDL lowers cardiovascular risk. Cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) is a new therapeutic target, because the cholesteryl ester transfer process lowers HDL cholesterol and contributes to an atherogenic lipoprotein profile, particularly when plasma triglycerides are high. Clinical evidence suggests that coronary artery calcification as well as intima media thickness is positively related to plasma cholesteryl ester transfer, and that high plasma CETP concentration is associated with increased cardiovascular risk in hypertriglyceridaemia. However, CETP could also have anti‐atherogenic potential, since it provides a potentially beneficial route for delivery of HDL‐derived cholesteryl esters to the liver. In addition, CETP could also favourably stimulate peripheral cell cholesterol removal and enhance hepatic cholesterol uptake. Recent evidence suggests that a high CETP level may confer lower cardiovascular risk in the context of low triglycerides. At maximal doses, the CETP inhibitors JTT‐705 and torcetrapib elicit a marked rise in HDL cholesterol of up to 34% and 91–106%, respectively. The effectiveness of these drugs on (intermediate) clinical outcome measures is currently being tested in large‐scale phase III clinical trials, with torcetrapib being only evaluated in combination therapy with atorvastatin. When and how to use CETP inhibitors, e.g. in combination with a statin or a fibrate, is a major challenge. We propose that low HDL cholesterol in the context of high triglycerides, such as found in type 2 diabetes mellitus, could become an important indication area for this new class of drugs.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The association of HDL cholesterol concentration with the -629C>A CETP promoter polymorphism is not fully explained by its relationship with plasma cholesteryl ester transfer.

TL;DR: The association between CETP gene and HDL cholesterol appears to be at least in part unexplained by the plasma cholesteryl ester transfer process, according to a study measuring the contributions of the CETP −629C>A genotype, plasma CETP mass, CET, HDL cholesterol, lipids and apolipoprotein A‐I in 220 non‐diabetic men without cardiovascular disease.
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A reduction of CETP activity, not an increase, is associated with modestly impaired postprandial lipemia and increased HDL-Cholesterol in adult asymptomatic women

TL;DR: The moderate CETP deficiency phenotype included a paradoxically high HDL-C and its sub fractions, positive associations with c-IMT, a postprandial VLDL-C increment predicting negatively CETP activity and CETPActivity regulating inversely the increment in ApoB100-containing lipoproteins.
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Viability of Developing CETP Inhibitors

TL;DR: Although raising high-density lipoprotein by a variety of pharmaceutical approaches may still provide a desirable target, CETP inhibitory treatment has very little to offer and CETP stimulation, for example by probucol or derivatives may provide instead a more satisfactory approach to cardiovascular prevention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanism of Inhibition of Cholesteryl Ester Transfer Protein by Small Molecule Inhibitors.

TL;DR: The results from molecular dynamics simulations and protein-ligand docking studies suggest that the hydrophobic interactions between the CETP core tunnel residues and inhibitor moieties play a pivotal role, and physical occlusion of the CETp tunnel by these small molecules is the primary mechanism of CETP inhibition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mulling over the odds of CETP inhibition

TL;DR: The physiological importance of CETP for the regulation of VLDL/LDL and HDL metabolism originally emerged from the observation of high HDL cholesterol and by inducing the accumulation of cholesteryl esters.
References
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High-density lipoprotein cholesterol and cardiovascular disease. Four prospective American studies.

TL;DR: A consistent inverse relation of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels and coronary heart disease event rates was apparent in BRHS as well as in the four American studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular physiology of reverse cholesterol transport.

TL;DR: The removal of cholesterol from cells, like its delivery, appears to be specific and well regulated, and RCT can now be understood in molecular terms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cholesteryl Ester Transfer Protein: A Novel Target for Raising HDL and Inhibiting Atherosclerosis

TL;DR: Small-molecule inhibitors of CETP have now been tested in human subjects and shown to increase the concentration of HDL cholesterol while decreasing that of LDL cholesterol and apoB, and test the hypothesis in randomized trials of humans that pharmacological inhibition of CETp retards the development of atherosclerosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diabetic dyslipidaemia: from basic research to clinical practice*

TL;DR: Recent discoveries have established the transcription factors including PPARs, SREBP-1 and LXRs as the key regulators of lipid assembly in the liver as a new target to tailor more efficient drugs to treat diabetic dyslipidaemia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of an Inhibitor of Cholesteryl Ester Transfer Protein on HDL Cholesterol

TL;DR: In subjects with low HDL cholesterol levels, CETP inhibition with torcetrapib markedly increased HDL cholesterol Levels and also decreased LDL cholesterol Levels, both when administered as monotherapy and when administered in combination with a statin.
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