A diagnosis of high cholesterol can be intimidating, but there is a lot you can do to control this condition. In addition to modifying your diet and upping your exercise, the addition of a HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitor, a class of drugs commonly called “statins” can safely and effectively lower your cholesterol. (HMG-CoA Reductase helps our liver produce cholesterol; when the chemical is inhibited, the amount of cholesterol is correspondingly reduced.)
How to Chose the Statin Best for You
For people with heart disease, statins can lower the risk of a cardiac event and subsequent death. If you and your doctor have determined that you need a statin, how can you pick the right statin for your needs There are six statins on the market: atorvastatin, fluvastatin, lovastatin, pravastatin, rosuvastatin, and simvastatin. They differ in their ability to reduce cholesterol, and they also differ in their rates of reducing heart attacks. Their costs are also quite different and since most people take statins for a long time, the costs add up over the years. With all of these variables, choosing the right statin for you can be complex. All statins are capable of lowering LDL (bad) cholesterol and triglycerides, and raising HDL (good) cholesterol. The statins do differ in how effectively they can do this, and it is highly dose-dependent. Says Drug Digest:
If the needed LDL-C reduction is up to 35-36%, any of the statins should be acceptable choices for therapy. For a desired reduction of LDL-C greater than 42%, simvastatin (Zocor), atorvastatin (Lipitor), or rosuvastatin (Crestor) would be needed.
Most Popular Statins
Indeed, the best-known statins are Crestor, Lipitor, and Zocor (quite probably because they have the greatest effect on cholesterol levels). The latter two are also endorsed by Consumer Reports. Taking evidence for effectiveness, safety, and cost into account, the publication rated both of these statins as Consumer Reports Best Buy Drugs. They recommend:
Generic (simvastatin 20mg or simvastati 40 mg) if you need 30% or greater LDL reduction and/or have heart disease or diabetes, or if you have had a heart attack or have acute coronary syndrome and your LDL level is not highly elevated. Atorvastatin (Lipitor 40mg or Lipitor 80mg) if you have had a heart attack or have acute coronary syndrome and your LDL is highly elevated; use for two years and then reconfirm need or switch to generic simvastatin.
Statin Effectiveness
Charts on Drug Digest have some great comparisons. For instance, they show that Lipitor 10mg – Lipitor 80mg can reduce total cholesterol by 25-45%, while Zocor 5mg – Zocor 80mg can reduce the same numbers by 19-36%, and Crestor 5mg – Crestor 40mg can reduce it by 33-46%. As for lowering HDL, Lipitor can offer reduction of 5-9%, Zocor lessens HDL by 8-16%, and Crestor lowers these numbers by 8-14%. As you can see, choosing the proper statin has a lot to do with which numbers (Total Cholesterol, HDL, LDL, or triglycerides) you are trying to effect. A final consideration is that last year there was reporting on an observational study done by Pfizer that suggested that there were certain benefits to using Lipitor over Crestor. However, one must keep in mind that Pfizer conducted the study, and they are the manufacturer of Lipitor, and they are defending this drug against Merck’s Zocor product, which is now available in a generic formula. Here is the information as presented by The Wall Street Journal:
An analysis, published in the latest Clinical Therapeutics Journal, mined a large database of health-care records and found that patients taking Lipitor had a 12% lower risk of a cardiovascular event than those on simvastatin, the generic name for Zocor. The patients on Lipitor had a 15% lower risk of having a heart attack. So-called observational studies like this one that look at data after the fact aren’t as powerful as prospective clinical trials. Jack Tu, a cardiologist who specializes in outcomes research at Canada’s Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, says the latest Pfizer study didn’t take into account factors that could predispose a patient to heart problems, such as smoking and cholesterol levels. Just on this alone, you wouldn’t recommend that everyone should switch onto Lipitor,†he says. Still, Pfizer hopes that doctors will take notice. We’ve done two rather large observational studies and patients have a lower risk of cardiovascular events on Lipitor [compared with] simvastatin, says Susan Shiff, Pfizer’s team leader for cardiovascular outcomes. Doctors need to factor this into discussions with patients.
Conclusion
You should definitely discuss with your physician which statin is right for you. In general, the best plan is to take the LOWEST dose of a statin that gets you to your target level for cholesterol. Overly large doses can be harmful to your liver and to your muscles. If you experience muscle aches and pains when taking a statin, contact your doctor immediately.
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77 Comments on "Crestor vs Lipitor vs Zocor – Which Statin Is Better for You?"
Did the DRUG DIGEST really mean to say these statins LOWER HDL?
Aren’t they supposed to LOWER LDL and possibly RAISE HDL???
for the HDL , it increase not decrease as mentioned here :
(As for lowering HDL, Lipitor can offer reduction of 5-9%, Zocor lessens HDL by 8-16%, and Crestor lowers these numbers by 8-14%. )
While I assume that was a mistake, they should help raise HDL as lowering HDL is undesired, I have had that experience. I was 280 total and 33 HDL before Lipitor 20 mg. After 1 month of lipitor 20mg, I am 165 total and 20 HDL. While 165 is great, 20 is horrible. How do I go from 33 to 20 HDL in one month???
According to the Drug Digest article referenced, all of the drugs raise HDL (as you would expect). So when the above says “As for lowering HDL .. .reduction … lessens … lowers …” they got it exactly backwards. Reckless writing about an important subject.
I have been on Crestor for 5 weeks, the past two weeks i have been experiencing back muscel pain. it isnt going away. i am wondering if it has anything to do with Crestor, should i change to Lipitor?
What about Niacin for lowering Cholesterol?
I tried Niacin, it causes massive flushing, you can faint easily, and get head rush’s and sweat a lot.
Niacin does has to be gradually be increased and when you reach a level that causes problems you should go down to last acceptable dose. Has done a good job of increasing my good cholesterol and puts my ratio of bad/good in range.
I experienced the same problems 12 years ago when my Doctor started me on Lipitor first, before my stints were installed. I complained to him and he started me on Zocor, which did not give me the aches and pains. I was on 80mg of Zocor for about 9 years, until last year when he switch me to Lipitor 40 mg, but eating correctly, and exercising is the real key to activating these drugs.
I have been on Lipitor in increasing amounts for about 17 years. AARP United Healthcare/SecureHorizons promise that you can take Lipitor in whatever dosage your DR recommends although it is a Tier 2, which I accepted.
However, this is a deception & untrue. UnitedHealthcare refused to authorize my Doctors prescriptions of Lipitor in favor of the less effective (and less costly) Zocor. Healthcare insurance companies can say anything they want with impunity. Healthcare insurance reform must include teeth to force companies like AARP UnitedHealthcare and SecureHorizons to stop deceiving their customers.
lipitor caused me so many muscle problems my dr. took me off it and switched to zocor a lesser amt hope it works at first sign of any muscle problems i will stop it fast
Can switch from Lipitor to Simvastatin without any problems or time to wean off of the lipitor?
Currently taking 10 mg of Lipitor for a couple years now. My cholesterol or lipid profile is as follows:
Total cholesterol: 197
HDL cholesterol: 48
Triglycerides: 56
LDL cholesterol: 138
My doctor wants to switch me from 10 mg of Lipitor to 40 mg of Simvastatin. My question: Is 40 mg of Simvasatin four times the strength as 10 mg of Lipitor?
I had a no fasting reading of 213 Triglycerides in Oct while on 60 mg’s Lipitor (181 total Cholesterol, 56 HDL, & 93 LDL) I can’t imagine what my Triglycerides will be on Simvastatin. Anybody know how I can get justify getting back on Lipitor? I don’t like being a lab rat for AARP’s United Healthcare.
Does anyone know if Crestor, Lipitor, or Zocor can cause Diabetes?
Rose: There is some evidence for increases in hemoglobin a1c (long term measure of blood glucose) with statin use but it looks to be around 0-10%. If you were borderline diabetic it could push you over, however, exercise and dietary changes that should be implemented with statin use should counter this change. See: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20147603
Which statin to take? The answer is very simple: Crestor. Rosuvastatin (Crestor) is the only statin that can reverse plaques in the arteries. In the highest dose Lipitor can stop the growth of the plaque and the rest can slow the growth.
Notice the difference between “reverse”, “stop” and “slow down”.
Slowing means the plaque is still growing, stop means its still there in the same size as before – and reversing means the plaque morphologically changes, decreasing in its size.
Do the thinking, which should be the goal?
What I am saying is proven by evidence based medical studies.
I have been on 20 mg of Lipitor daily for 3 years and my numbers have improved dramatically. However, I have muscle pains in my legs and my knees have acted up for no apparent reasons, achy & stiff. Any thoughts or suggestions??
Also, can you take 40 mg every other day vs 20 mg every day ?? Prescription price for 100 pills is same…odd ?1?
I have been on statins for 12 years, most recently lipitor. i couldn’t even walk my dog without serious back pain. threw the lipitor away and now i am jogging (slowly and not too far) for the first itme in 40 years. but doc put me on crestor, so we shall see. I can’t stand the mental misery of statins but i must live with them somehow.
Benet, I see this was written in 2010. This is similar to what has happened to me. However it was my knees that became weak and difficult to walk. Got off lipitor and now starting to take Crestor. What happened ? Could you tolerate the Crestor better than the Lipitor? Thanks !!! Pam
I take Crestor 5mg,mynumbers are good.the problem is the cost of this drug. Is there an other drug I can take that will be less, not Lipitor I got muscle pains when using Lipitor
thank you
You could do 2 things. Purchase the crestor in generic form in Canada it’s about $33 per month or have your dr. write a prescription for 10 mg and split the pill.
you said to split the crestor
10mg in half. How do you split a pill with no line? Thank youmartha
martha in walmart and walgreens they have a little machine that has a rubber inside where you can put the pill in between the 2 peices of rubber. You shut the machine after you lodge the pill inside, and it splits it perfectly in 2 with a very sharp razor blade on the top side of the machine. Its called a pill cutter machine. It works so well for me. I split my simvastatin till it gets to 5mg
In taking ANY statin, the following supplements have good substantiation: the “Ubiquinol” (only) version of CoQ10 (100mgs), L-Carnitine, L-Carnosine, Alpha-Lipoic-Acid, Acetyl- L-Cysteine, D-Ribose: Cramps will likely abate, and risk of C-HeartFailure is mini-mized.
I am a heart patient. My doctor recently does me with Crestor at 40 mg. daily. I just read that 10 mgs is a high dose. Am have been sick with no appetite for several weeks since starting this drug. Am I being over prescribed Crestor?
When my husband’s cardiologist started him on Crestor he started with 10 mg. I would be very careful if you are not feeling well after starting that medication or any medication. Talk to your doctor and if the Cardiologist won’t listen, talk to an internist.
Michael L. you are so right, but the problem is people are sitting back and taking all this abuse from insurance companies and Big Pharma. We need more advocates to educate the people.
Cheryl – You indicated you’re a heart patient. If you’ve had a heart attack, 40mg might be justified. However, as MJ suggested, I wouldn’t delay seeing an internist if your doc won’t listen. 20mg is the standard max dosage unless your cardiologist feels you need aggressive treatment because of your history. If you’re losing weight & have no appetite, u really need to find a cause.
MJ – I don’t feel the public understands the issue of healthcare insurance reform. And they won’t until the lamestream media outlines the abuse. With a med pay ratio of .80 cents and an expanded customer base in 3 years, they will suck even more money out of this economy.
Unfortunately, the Roberts court has opened the gates to fund an unlimited amount of anti-reform retoric.
We are totally boned unless the public wakes up.
rhetoric
Michael L. – I guess there are some that professed “change” and “health care reform” and that hasn’t happened. If you think hard about this insurance companies control your life and money – health, home, auto, life and probably a few more.
Has anyone had headaches or sleep problems while on Crestor? Does this resolve over time?
@Robin N.
I have been on Lipitor, Crestor and Zocor, of course not at the same time. Out of the three Crestor seems to presently works the best. With smaller doses and larger reduction in Bad Cholesterol, I have had challenges with insurance companies with all three. But now using Crestor and paying a much larger copay.
I do not like to pay so much for any medication but at least its covered in part. Somewhere approximately a third of the cost is copay.
I have had no side effects of any kind with Crestor and considering the options.
God Bless America.
Humana charges $41 for a 30-day supply of Crestor (10MG) and $6 for Lovastatin or Pravastatin Sodium or Simvastatin.
I formerly was prescribed Lipitor which caused muscle weakness.
Suggestions?
I have been on Crestor 20 mg for years and have not had any problems. My Mom is on Lipitor and Im noticing shes getting weaker, cant walk very long and has to sit down. I hear Lipitor causes muscle aches. Im going to ask her doctor about changing it to Crestor etc..
My husband has been on Crestor (5 mg) for about 6 months. He doesn’t seem to have any problems with it so I hesitate to change to Lipitor or Zocor. Crestor will not go generic for several years. IT IS VERY EXPENSIVE. The price for 30 pills is $144.00 but with a card from the company it is offered for $65.00. I feel that this is still very xpensive for seniors. We have no Medicare advantage.
How do you get a card from the company to be able to get Crestor for $65 instead of $144. My insurance just informed me today that they won’t pay for my Crestor.
TO 38, if you must take, you must take at least 200 mg.co-q-10.im no dr.Ask your dr.very important lipitor is a co-q 10 depletor, do it,take care
40-38 ? how many mamal’s drink milk dairy for calcium into adulthood. Im telling you some thing.think read “ceolation”
Who is your insurance company? Why did they accept 10% and refuse 5%? Appeal your decision and see what happens. Google consumer advocacy group for drug coverage. Write your representatives. Fight health insurance Companies – They pulled out $12 billion just in profits. Your Dr should be able to overule your healthcare provider.
Ck out what MJ said:
“You need to have your doctor submit an authorization/exception request and you should not have been denied a 30 day temporary fill during the transition while getting the necessary authorizations from your doctor. …. Contact the Centers for Medicare Advocacy (860) 456-7790.”
Excellent advice, Dan. And you’re absoulutely correct, – it all depends on your insurance company! In a country that gives $500 billion tax cuts to the richest 2% of the population, we can’t seem to pony up those pharm rep cards for those with too much plaque in their veins!
@Michael Edwards It’s so sad that u r in the U.S.A here in Canada if u can’t pay for it the Doctor well give it to u for free and there many places in Canada where u don’t have to pay for any meds at all for the rest of your life and you can have a good job and you still don’t have to pay for your meds.
My doc changed me from Lipitor to Zocor (cost issue) and then to Crestor. After a few months, I developed slight skin peeling, which creates lesions. They appear almost everywhere, except, thank heavens, not my face. Any ideas? Has anyone else developed skin conditions? tks.
my sister in law is on Crestor for some months, she has developed a skin condition all over arms, and body, not on face. Â Very dry, itchy, looks like old crocodile skin, 5 months wait to see specialist, what did you do. Robyn
I am on Lititor 20mg and Crestor 80mg. Is this too much meds ?
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