Pills containing plant sterols lower LDL cholesterol
A pill containing plant substances called sterols can
help lower cholesterol, according to researchers at
Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
The researchers studied patients who already were eating
a heart-healthy diet and taking statin drugs to control
cholesterol. The addition of plant sterols helped
further lower total cholesterol and contributed to a
nearly 10 percent reduction in low-density lipoprotein (LDL)
cholesterol, the so-called "bad" cholesterol. Results of
the study were published in the American Journal of
Cardiology.
The National Cholesterol Education Program recommends
that those with elevated cholesterol eat foods
containing plant sterols as a way to lower
cardiovascular risk, but many sterol-containing foods
are inconvenient for some patients.
Structurally similar to cholesterol, plant sterols can
reduce the absorption of cholesterol in the gut by
competing with cholesterol to get absorbed and
transported into the body. When consumed in the diet,
sterols are known to lower cholesterol levels, but
sterols are not readily absorbed in the intestine unless
they have been dissolved in something that the intestine
can easily absorb. Because sterols are not
water-soluble, past strategies have involved dissolving
them in fat.
Most sterol-containing foods studied so far have been
brands of margarine. Studies have found that a daily
intake of one or two tablespoons of sterol-containing
margarine could significantly lower LDL cholesterol.
Some juices and puddings also contain plant sterols.
"One problem is many of our patients already have
lowered their intake of fats and calories and don't use
products like margarine on a regular basis," says Anne
Carol Goldberg, M.D., lead author of the new study and
associate professor of medicine at Washington
University. "In addition, many of these people eat out
regularly, and they can't easily take a particular brand
of margarine to a restaurant."
To deliver the sterols in pill form, the plant compounds
were combined with a substance called lecithin and
compressed into tablets. When mixed with lecithin, the
normally insoluble sterols are able to dissolve in water
and get absorbed in the intestine.
Goldberg's team studied 26 patients who were following
the American Heart Association Heart Healthy Diet and
taking statin drugs to control cholesterol. Over six
weeks, half were randomly assigned to take inactive
placebo pills while the rest took sterol tablets. All
patients ingested four tablets, twice daily with meals,
while continuing to take statin drugs.
After treatment, those who took the sterol pills
averaged a 9 percent reduction in LDL cholesterol and a
6 percent decline in total cholesterol. And Goldberg's
team found that the higher the LDL before the study
began, the greater the drop in the bad cholesterol.
"Those who started with higher LDL got a bigger
response, a bigger drop in their LDL, when they added
plant sterols to their regimen," Goldberg says.
The plant sterols appear to provide an effective way to
lower cholesterol levels, especially LDL cholesterol,
according to Goldberg. But she says the sterols probably
will work best when given as an additional therapy, and
she recommends they be used in combination with diet
and/or cholesterol-lowering statin drugs.
"This type of treatment would be in addition to dietary
changes and other medication," she says. "There probably
are some people who have very mild abnormalities in
cholesterol who could get by with a sterol supplement
alone, but people with higher cholesterol levels will
need medication, too. They'll take plant sterols in
addition to other therapies and benefit from the
additive effect we observed in this study."
Goldberg says it would be useful to try and replicate
these findings in larger studies.
"We used a small sample size, but we still saw a
significant effect," she says.
The sterol pills used in the study are not yet
commercially available.