Role of Omega-3 Fatty Acids in Cardiovascular Disease: the Debate Continues.

Curr Atheroscler Rep

Elucida Research LLC, P.O. Box 7100, Beverly, MA, 01915-0091, USA.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Omega-3 fatty acids, particularly EPA and DHA, are being studied for their potential to lower cardiovascular risk in patients already on statins, but results have been inconsistent due to differences in formulation and dosage.
  • Icosapent ethyl (IPE), a purified form of EPA, has shown significant reductions in cardiovascular events in clinical trials, while mixed EPA/DHA formulations have not demonstrated similar benefits despite lowering triglyceride levels.
  • Research highlights distinct mechanisms between EPA and DHA, suggesting that EPA has unique properties that improve cardiovascular health, enhancing endothelial function and supporting plaque stability.

Article Abstract

Purpose Of Review: The omega-3 fatty acids (n3-FAs), eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), have recently undergone testing for their ability to reduce residual cardiovascular (CV) risk among statin-treated subjects. The outcome trials have yielded highly inconsistent results, perhaps attributable to variations in dosage, formulation, and composition. In particular, CV trials using icosapent ethyl (IPE), a highly purified ethyl ester of EPA, reproducibly reduced CV events and progression of atherosclerosis compared with mixed EPA/DHA treatments. This review summarizes the mechanistic evidence for differences among n3-FAs on the development and manifestations of atherothrombotic disease.

Recent Findings: Large randomized clinical trials with n3-FAs have produced discordant outcomes despite similar patient profiles, doses, and triglyceride (TG)-lowering effects. A large, randomized trial with IPE, a prescription EPA only formulation, showed robust reduction in CV events in statin treated patients in a manner proportional to achieved blood EPA concentrations. Multiple trials using mixed EPA/DHA formulations have not shown such benefits, despite similar TG lowering. These inconsistencies have inspired investigations into mechanistic differences among n3-FAs, as EPA and DHA have distinct membrane interactions, metabolic products, effects on cholesterol efflux, antioxidant properties, and tissue distribution. EPA maintains normal membrane cholesterol distribution, enhances endothelial function, and in combination with statins improves features implicated in plaque stability and reduces lipid content of plaques. Insights into reductions in residual CV risk have emerged from clinical trials using different formulations of n3-FAs. Among high-risk patients on contemporary care, mixed n3-FA formulations showed no reduction in CV events. The distinct benefits of IPE in multiple trials may arise from pleiotropic actions that correlate with on-treatment EPA levels beyond TG-lowering. These effects include altered platelet function, inflammation, cholesterol distribution, and endothelial dysfunction. Elucidating such mechanisms of vascular protection for EPA may lead to new interventions for atherosclerosis, a disease that continues to expand worldwide.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9834373PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11883-022-01075-xDOI Listing

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