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High-dose atorvastatin therapy progressively decreases skeletal muscle mitochondrial respiratory capacity in humans
Terence E. Ryan, … , John P. Thyfault, P. Darrell Neufer
Terence E. Ryan, … , John P. Thyfault, P. Darrell Neufer
Published February 22, 2024
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2024;9(4):e174125. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.174125.
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Clinical Research and Public Health Muscle biology

High-dose atorvastatin therapy progressively decreases skeletal muscle mitochondrial respiratory capacity in humans

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Abstract

BACKGROUND While the benefits of statin therapy on atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease are clear, patients often experience mild to moderate skeletal myopathic symptoms, the mechanism for which is unknown. This study investigated the potential effect of high-dose atorvastatin therapy on skeletal muscle mitochondrial function and whole-body aerobic capacity in humans.METHODS Eight overweight (BMI, 31.9 ± 2.0) but otherwise healthy sedentary adults (4 females, 4 males) were studied before (day 0) and 14, 28, and 56 days after initiating atorvastatin (80 mg/d) therapy.RESULTS Maximal ADP-stimulated respiration, measured in permeabilized fiber bundles from muscle biopsies taken at each time point, declined gradually over the course of atorvastatin treatment, resulting in > 30% loss of skeletal muscle mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation capacity by day 56. Indices of in vivo muscle oxidative capacity (via near-infrared spectroscopy) decreased by 23% to 45%. In whole muscle homogenates from day 0 biopsies, atorvastatin inhibited complex III activity at midmicromolar concentrations, whereas complex IV activity was inhibited at low nanomolar concentrations.CONCLUSION These findings demonstrate that high-dose atorvastatin treatment elicits a striking progressive decline in skeletal muscle mitochondrial respiratory capacity, highlighting the need for longer-term dose-response studies in different patient populations to thoroughly define the effect of statin therapy on skeletal muscle health.FUNDING NIH R01 AR071263.

Authors

Terence E. Ryan, Maria J. Torres, Chien-Te Lin, Angela H. Clark, Patricia M. Brophy, Cheryl A. Smith, Cody D. Smith, E. Matthew Morris, John P. Thyfault, P. Darrell Neufer

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Figure 1

Short-term statin therapy decreases skeletal muscle mitochondrial function in vivo and aerobic capacity.

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Short-term statin therapy decreases skeletal muscle mitochondrial functi...
(A) Whole-body aerobic capacity (VO2 max) before and after 56 days of statin therapy. (B) Relative individual changes (%) in VO2 max after statin therapy. (C) Insulin sensitivity measured by IVGTT. (D) Postexercise recovery kinetics of muscle oxygen consumption measured by near infrared spectroscopy (mVO2) before (pre) and after (post) 56 days of statin therapy. (E and F) Following a single exponential fitting, the calculated rate constants (directly related to mitochondrial capacity) (E) and time constants (inversely related to mitochondrial capacity) (F) are shown. Data are mean ± SEM (n = 8 for all panels). Data analyzed by paired t tests. *P < 0.05 was considered significant.

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