Significance: Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) represent a major public health burden. High low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol is a recognized pathogenic factor for atherosclerosis, and its complications and statins represent the most potent and widely used therapeutic approach to prevent and control these disorders.
Recent advances: A number of clinical and experimental studies concur to identify endothelial dysfunction as a primary step in the development of atherosclerosis, as well as a risk factor for subsequent clinical events. Oxidant stress resulting from chronic elevation of plasma LDL-cholesterol (LDL-chol) is a major contributor to both endothelial dysfunction and its complications, for example, through alterations of endothelial nitric oxide signaling.
Critical issues: Statin treatment reduces morbidity and mortality of CVD, but increasing evidence questions that this is exclusively through reduction of plasma LDL-chol. The identification of ancillary effects on (cardio)vascular biology, for example, through their modulation of oxidative stress, will not only increase our understanding of their mechanisms of action, with a potential broadening of their indication(s), but also lead to the identification of new molecular targets for future therapeutic developments in CVD.
Future directions: Further characterization of molecular pathways targeted by statins, for example, not directly mediated by changes in plasma lipid concentrations, should enable a more comprehensive approach to the pathogenesis of (cardio)vascular disease, including, for example, epigenetic regulation and fine tuning of cell metabolism.