Lipid-altering agents should be used in addition to a diet restricted in saturated fat and cholesterol when response to diet and other nonpharmacological measures alone has been inadequate.
SIMCOR (niacin extended-release/simvastatin) is indicated as an adjunct to diet to reduce total‑C, LDL-C, Apo B, non-HDL-C, or TG, or to increase
HDL-C in patients with primary hypercholesterolemia and mixed dyslipidemia (Fredrickson Types IIa and IIb) when treatment with simvastatin monotherapy or niacin extended-release monotherapy is considered inadequate.
Limitations of use: No incremental benefit of SIMCOR on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality over and above that demonstrated for simvastatin monotherapy and niacin monotherapy has been established.
Please click here for Important Safety Information you should know about SIMCOR.
In OCEANS, an open-label randomized study: SIMCOR lipid results in untreated patients*1, 2
- The primary objective was to evaluate the long-term safety of
SIMCOR 2000/40 mg . - The secondary objectives were to determine the percentage change from baseline to Week 24 in non-HDL-C (primary lipid endpoint) and other lipid parameters, including LDL-C, HDL-C and TG
Lipid results (median percentage change from baseline) of SIMCOR 2000/40 mg at 24 weeks in untreated mITT (n=162)¶
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* Patients who were untreated at screening and who continued to have elevated non–HDL-C after receiving simvastatin
¶ Median baseline values for the mITT population were
Results for patients on treatment at 24 weeks (n=85)*
Safety Considerations for SIMCOR
Myopathy and/or rhabdomyolysis have been reported when simvastatin is used in combination with lipid-altering doses (≥1 g/day) of niacin.
Patients on SIMCOR should be monitored for muscle pain, tenderness or weakness, particularly during the first month of treatment or during any period of upward dosage titration. Periodic CK determinations may be considered in such situations, but there is no assurance that such monitoring will prevent myopathy. SIMCOR therapy should be discontinued if markedly elevated CK levels (above 10x ULN) occur or myopathy is diagnosed or suspected.
- Efficacy
- Additional Lipid Data
- SIMCOR
2000/40 mg (OCEANS-all patients) - SIMCOR
2000/40 mg (OCEANS-treatment-naive) - NCEP Goal Attainment
- Safety Data
- Flushing
- Dosing
- Patient Profiles
References:
- Data on file, Abbott Laboratories.
- Karas, RH, Kashyap, ML, et al. Long-Term Safety and Efficacy of a Combination of Niacin Extended-Release and Simvastatin in Patients with Dyslipidemia: The OCEANS Study. Am J Cardio Drugs. 2008; 8(2):69-81.



