Press Release
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Amy Molnar
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Using Statins to Potentially Treat Rheumatoid Arthritis
Study Finds Statins Have Beneficial Effect on Rheumatoid Arthritis Cells In
Vitro
Statins, a class of drugs widely used to treat high cholesterol, have also
recently been studied for their potential role in inflammation and other cell
processes, including immune response. They have also been shown to induce apoptosis
(cell death) in normal cells and tumor cells. Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) causes
proliferation of synovial tissue, which lines the joints, but little is known
about the effect of statins on this type of tissue. A study published in the
February 2006 issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism (http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis)
examined whether statins are able to induce apoptosis in synovial cells of
patients with RA and found that they have potential as a novel way of treating
the disease.
The activation and proliferation of synovial cells, which is thought to play
a key role in RA, may be exacerbated when apoptosis of synovial cells is either
insufficient or resistant to treatment. In the first study to demonstrate whether
statins can induce apoptosis in synovial cells of RA patients, researchers
led by Takao Nagashima of Jichi Medical School , Tochigi , Japan measured the
effect in vitro of two statins, fluvastatin (a fat-soluble statin) and pravastatin
(a water-soluble statin) on human synovial cells from patients with RA and
osteoarthropathy. “In the present study, we demonstrated that fluvastatin induced
apoptosis in synoviocytes from patients with RA, but not in those from patients
with osteoarthropathy, suggesting that the apoptotic effect of fluvastatin
is a mechanism for suppression of inflammatory arthritis such as RA by statins,” the
authors state.
They were also able to determine the pathway by which apoptosis occurred:
the inhibition of protein geranygeranylation (a process involving the metabolism
of certain proteins that is essential for proper cell function, including the
survival of vascular smooth muscle cells) was shown to be necessary for apoptosis
to occur in these cells. Specifically, the pathway involves inhibition of the
geranylgeranylated protein RhoA/RhoA kinase, which has already been shown to
be involved in apoptosis.
The researchers point out that the in vitro concentrations they used of the
statins were much higher than amounts that would normally be prescribed to
patients. Although they note that it is possible that in the human body relatively
low, but sustained, blood levels of statins would exert an effect similar to
that seen in vitro with higher concentrations and short incubation times, they
acknowledge that the therapeutic effect of fluvastatins in patients remains
to be determined.
The authors conclude: ‘The induction of apoptosis in RA synovial cells by
fluvastatin and the biologic antiatherosclerotic properties of the statins
suggest that they may turn out to be ideal therapeutic agents in RA. Based
on these results, we propose that the statins warrant clinical trials as potential
modifiers of RA.”
Article: “Apoptosis of Rheumatoid Synovial Cells by Statins Through the Blocking
of Protein Geranlgeranylation,” Takao Nagashima, Hitoaki Okazaki, Kazuo Yudoh,
Hiroaki Matsuno, Seiji Minota, Arthritis & Rheumatism, February
2006; 54:2; pp. 579-586.