Ezetimibe attaches to the brush border of the small intestine and selectively inhibits the intestinal absorption of cholesterol and otherrelated phytosterols. Ezetimibe acts on the sterol transporter , the so-calledNiemann-Pick-C1-Like-1(NPC1L1) protein, which is responsible for the intestinal absorption of cholesterol and phytosterols and is localized in the brush border of the small intestine (Altmann et al 2004). This leads to a reduced absorption of exogenously supplied and biliary cholesterol from the intestine into the bloodstream (Davis HR and Veltri EP 2007).
Ezetimibe can therefore be combined well with statins or bempedoic acid, which inhibit endogenous cholesterol synthesis in the liver, and an additional greater reduction in cholesterol levels can be achieved through a complementary effect of both substances than through monotherapy (Ballantyne CM et al 2004). The cholesterol reduction in monotherapy with ezetimibe is reported to be approx. 17% (Dujovne CA et al 2002) and in combination with statins approx. 25% (Gagno C et al 2002). In addition, there is a slight reduction in triglygerides (approx. 8%) and a slight increase in HDL cholesterol (approx. 5%).
Preclinical and clinical studies have shown that ezetimibe inhibits the absorption of cholesterol, but has no effect on the absorption of triglycerides, fatty acids, bile acids, progesterone, ethinylestradiol or the fat-soluble vitamins A and D (Knoop RH et al 2003).
Ezetimibe given either in monotherapy or together with a statin leads to significant reductions in elevated levels of total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, apolipoprotein B and triglycerides and improves HDL cholesterol in patients with hypercholesterolemia (Ballantyne CM et al 2004).
Combination therapy with statins is more effective than increasing the dose of statinmonotherapy. The LDL-C values are lowered more and LDL-C target values can be achieved more quickly than with monotherapy with statins. This allows statins to be 'saved' and dose-dependent side effects of statins to be limited.
The effect of ezetimibe in combination with bempedoic acid is even greater than when combined with statins, with a reduction in LDL-C of approx. 47% ( ).
After initially unclear results with regard to an improvement in cardiovascular risk and endpoints, the IMPROVE study in over 18,000 patients showed that the combination of statins with ezetimibe (40 mg simvastatin/10 mg ezetimibe) can effectively reduce cardiovascular risk after an acute coronarysyndrome (ACS) compared to monotherapy with statins (40 mg) (Cannon CP et al 2015).
Recent meta-analyses confirm combination therapy ezetimibe with statins improves LDL-C lowering with comparable side effect profile, and lower risk of mortality, major cardiovascular events and stroke compared to monotherapy with statins (Banach M et al 2025).
For patients with type 2DM with extremely increased atherosclerotic risk, there is a comparable result in terms of cardiovascular risk and outcome for monotherapy with high-dose statins and combination therapy statins/ezetimibe (Kao Y-C et al 2021).
(For cardiovascular risk, morbidity and mortality, see also Ludwig WD Hsg. guideline AkdÄ 2023).
Ezetimibe also shows efficacy in rare homozygous sitosterolemia. A significant reduction in sitosterol and campesterol was demonstrated in a study with 50 patients.
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