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.
SIMCOR—Aggressively targets key lipids all at once
Please click here for Important Safety Information you should know about SIMCOR.
SEACOAST I results at 24 weeks1,2:
SIMCOR 1000/20 mg, simvastatin 20 mg
* Patients were either treatment naive or had been receiving simvastatin
† Significant vs simvastatin
‡ Medians are reported for TG
Safety Considerations for SIMCOR
SIMCOR contains simvastatin, which occasionally causes myopathy manifested as muscle pain, tenderness, or weakness with CK levels above 10x ULN. Myopathy sometimes takes the form of rhabdomyolysis with or without acute renal failure secondary to myoglobinuria, and rare fatalities have occurred. The risk of myopathy/rhabdomyolysis is dose-related and is increased by high plasma concentrations of a statin.
SEACOAST low-dose study design2: A double-blind, randomized, multicenter, 24-week study compared the efficacy and safety of SIMCOR with low-dose and high-dose simvastatin in adult patients (N=641) with type II hyperlipidemia or mixed dyslipidemia. In the simvastatin low-dose arm (results shown above), patients (n=319) were either treatment naive or received a simvastatin
References:
- SIMCOR [package insert]. North Chicago, IL: Abbott Laboratories.
- Data on file, Abbott Laboratories.




