Atorvastatin (Lipitor®)

Drug Overview
Drug Class Statins
Mechanism HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitor
Primary Uses ASCVD Prevention; Hyperlipidemia
Route Oral
Dose Range 10–80 mg daily
Intensity Moderate–High
LDL Reduction 35–60%
Metabolism CYP3A4
Half-life ~14 hours (active metabolites longer)
Elimination Hepatic
Renal Adjustment No
Black Box Warning No
FDA Approval 1996

Overview

Atorvastatin is a high-potency statin used for LDL reduction and prevention of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.

It is one of the most commonly prescribed statins and has strong outcome data in both primary and secondary prevention.

It is considered a cornerstone therapy in cardiovascular risk reduction.


Mechanism of Action

Primary Target:

Physiologic Effects:

Net Effect:

LDL reduction is dose-dependent.


Indications


Dosing

Moderate-Intensity:

High-Intensity:

No renal adjustment required.

Dose selection is based on ASCVD risk category.


Adverse Effects

Muscle:

Hepatic:

Metabolic:

Risk increases with:


Drug Interactions

Metabolized by CYP3A4.

Interaction risk with:

Higher myopathy risk when combined with:


Monitoring

Routine CK monitoring is not required unless symptomatic.


Comparison Within Class

Compared to Rosuvastatin:

Compared to Pravastatin:

Clinical Role:


High-Yield Pearls