Drug Monograph

Fluvastatin

Brand names: Lescol, Lescol XL (extended-release)

HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitor (Statin) · Oral
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
~3 h (IR capsule); ~9 h terminal (XL, due to slow release)
Metabolism
CYP2C9 (75%), CYP3A4 (20%), CYP2C8 (5%)
Protein Binding
>98%
Bioavailability
24% (IR); 29% (XL)
Volume of Distribution
0.35 L/kg
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Statin (HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor)
Available Doses
IR capsules: 20, 40 mg; XL tablet: 80 mg
Route
Oral
Renal Adjustment
No adjustment for mild-moderate; caution >40 mg in severe impairment
Hepatic Adjustment
Contraindicated in active liver disease (AUC ~2.5x in cirrhosis)
Pregnancy
Contraindicated
Lactation
Not recommended (excreted in animal milk 2:1 milk:plasma)
Schedule / Legal Status
Prescription only (Rx)
Generic Available
Yes
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Primary hypercholesterolaemia and mixed dyslipidaemia (Fredrickson IIa and IIb)AdultsAdjunctive to dietFDA Approved
Heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia (heFH)Adolescents 10–16 years (post-menarche in girls)Adjunctive to dietFDA Approved
Secondary prevention — coronary revascularisation risk reductionAdults with clinically evident CHDAdjunctive to dietFDA Approved
Slowing progression of coronary atherosclerosisAdults with CHDAdjunctive to dietFDA Approved

Fluvastatin was the first fully synthetic statin, approved by the FDA in 1993 (IR capsule) and 2000 (XL tablet). It is classified as a low-to-moderate intensity statin in the 2018 AHA/ACC cholesterol guideline: fluvastatin 40 mg BID or 80 mg XL provides moderate-intensity therapy (expected ~30–36% LDL-C reduction based on clinical trial data), while 20–40 mg daily is considered low-intensity (expected ~22–25% LDL-C reduction). A key clinical advantage of fluvastatin is its CYP2C9-predominant metabolism, meaning it largely avoids the CYP3A4 drug interactions that restrict the use of lovastatin and simvastatin. The LIPS trial established its role in secondary prevention after percutaneous coronary intervention.

Off-Label Uses

Post-transplant dyslipidaemia (renal and cardiac transplant): Fluvastatin is sometimes preferred in transplant recipients on cyclosporine because other statins carry more severe CYP3A4 interactions, though fluvastatin exposure is still increased and dose must be capped (Evidence quality: Moderate).

Post-PCI statin initiation in patients intolerant of high-intensity statins: The LIPS trial supports early post-PCI statin therapy; fluvastatin may be used when higher-intensity statins are not tolerated (Evidence quality: Low).

Dose

Dosing

Adult Dosing

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Primary hyperlipidaemia — LDL-C reduction ≥25% required40 mg capsule in evening40 mg BID or 80 mg XL once daily80 mg/dayXL tablet may be taken at any time of day
Do not take two 40 mg capsules at one time; use XL for single 80 mg dose
Primary hyperlipidaemia — LDL-C reduction <25% required20 mg capsule in evening20–40 mg once daily80 mg/dayTitrate at 4-week intervals based on lipid response
Secondary prevention post-PCI (LIPS protocol)40 mg BID (capsule)40 mg BID or 80 mg XL80 mg/dayInitiate within days of PCI per LIPS trial design
LIPS used 40 mg BID; XL 80 mg provides comparable LDL-C lowering despite lower systemic exposure
Co-administration with cyclosporine20 mg capsule once daily20 mg BID (capsule only)20 mg BID (capsule)Do not use XL tablet; hard dose cap (FDA PI)
Cyclosporine increases fluvastatin exposure
Co-administration with fluconazole20 mg capsule once daily20 mg BID (capsule only)20 mg BID (capsule)CYP2C9 inhibition increases fluvastatin levels (FDA PI)
Do not use XL formulation with fluconazole

Adolescent Dosing (heFH, ages 10–16 years)

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia20 mg capsule once daily20–40 mg BID or 80 mg XL80 mg/dayTitrate at 6-week intervals; girls must be at least 1 yr post-menarche
LDL-C ≥190 mg/dL or ≥160 mg/dL with positive family hx and ≥2 risk factors
Clinical Pearl — Flexible Dosing Schedule

Unlike lovastatin and simvastatin, fluvastatin XL (80 mg) can be taken at any time of day — not restricted to evening dosing. This is because the extended-release formulation provides sustained drug delivery regardless of timing. The IR capsule (20 or 40 mg) is still recommended in the evening. Food delays absorption of the IR capsule and decreases Cmax by ~50%, but does not meaningfully alter overall LDL-C lowering in clinical practice. Fluvastatin can be taken with or without food (FDA PI).

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Fluvastatin competitively inhibits HMG-CoA reductase, the rate-limiting enzyme that converts HMG-CoA to mevalonate in the cholesterol biosynthetic pathway. By reducing intracellular cholesterol in hepatocytes, fluvastatin stimulates upregulation of cell-surface LDL receptors, thereby increasing clearance of LDL-C from the circulation. As the first fully synthetic statin (a fluorinated indole derivative), fluvastatin is structurally distinct from the fungal-derived statins (lovastatin, simvastatin) and the fermentation-derived pravastatin. Beyond cholesterol lowering, fluvastatin demonstrates antiatherogenic, antithrombotic, and antioxidant properties and can improve endothelial function. Maximum LDL-C reduction is typically achieved by 4 weeks of therapy.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
Absorption~98% absorbed; Tmax <1 h (IR), ~3 h (XL); bioavailability 24% (IR), 29% (XL) due to first-passCan be taken with or without food; high-fat meal increases XL bioavailability ~50% but delays absorption
DistributionProtein binding >98%; Vd 0.35 L/kg; relatively hydrophilicBinding unaffected by warfarin, salicylic acid, or glyburide at therapeutic concentrations
MetabolismCYP2C9 (75%), CYP3A4 (20%), CYP2C8 (5%); inactive metabolites; also a CYP2C9 inhibitorKey advantage: CYP3A4 inhibitors (ketoconazole, erythromycin, itraconazole) do NOT significantly affect fluvastatin PK; CYP2C9 inhibitors (fluconazole) DO increase exposure
Eliminationt½ <3 h (IR); ~9 h terminal (XL, slow-release kinetics); 95% faeces (60% as metabolites), 5% urineIR has short half-life (evening dosing preferred); XL prolonged release allows any-time dosing; PK not affected by renal impairment
SE

Side Effects

1–10%Common
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Headache8.9% (IR)Most commonly reported; rate higher than placebo (5.6%) in controlled trials
Dyspepsia7.9% (IR); 3.5% (XL)Dose-related; lower incidence with extended-release formulation
Myalgia5.0% (IR); 3.8% (XL)Rates similar across dose ranges; indistinguishable from placebo in some analyses
Diarrhea4.9% (IR); 3.3% (XL)Usually mild and self-limiting
Abdominal pain4.9% (IR); 3.7% (XL)Includes upper abdominal pain; placebo rate ~3.8%
Nausea3.2% (IR); 2.5% (XL)Usually transient; resolves with continued therapy
Insomnia2.7% (IR)Not dose-related; consider evening-to-morning timing switch if persistent
Fatigue2.6% (IR)Placebo rate ~1.7%; usually mild
Influenza-like symptoms5.1% (XL)Reported more commonly with XL formulation vs IR
Sinusitis2.6% (XL)Upper respiratory symptoms more common with XL in controlled trials
Transaminase elevation (>3× ULN, persistent)0.2–2.7%Dose-related: 0.2% at 20 mg, 1.5% at 40 mg, 2.7% at 80 mg (divided); 1.9% for XL 80 mg
SeriousSerious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Myopathy (CK >10× ULN with symptoms)<0.1%Weeks to monthsDiscontinue immediately; check CK and renal function; no cases of CK >10× ULN in LIPS trial
RhabdomyolysisVery rareVariable; risk highest with drug interactionsEmergency care; IV hydration; permanently discontinue; monitor renal function
Immune-mediated necrotising myopathy (IMNM)Very rare (post-marketing)Months to years; persists after discontinuationDiscontinue; anti-HMG-CoA reductase antibody testing; rheumatology referral
Hepatotoxicity (symptomatic liver injury)RareUsually within 12 weeks; 91% of cases by week 12Stop fluvastatin; investigate alternative aetiologies; do not rechallenge
New-onset diabetes mellitusUncommon (class effect)Months to yearsContinue statin (CV benefit outweighs risk per FDA); manage diabetes per guidelines
Hypersensitivity reactions (anaphylaxis, angioedema, SJS)Very rare (post-marketing)VariableDiscontinue permanently; emergency treatment as needed
DiscontinuationDiscontinuation Rates
Lescol IR (Placebo-Controlled, 24 wk)
3.4% vs 2.3% placebo
Top reasons: Transaminase increase (0.8%), upper abdominal pain (0.3%), dyspepsia (0.3%)
Lescol XL (Controlled, 24 wk)
3.9%
Top reasons: Abdominal pain (0.7%), diarrhea (0.5%), nausea (0.4%), dyspepsia (0.4%)
Reason for DiscontinuationIncidenceContext
Transaminase elevations0.6–0.8%Most common cause in IR trials; dose-related; majority asymptomatic
GI adverse effects0.3–0.7%Abdominal pain, dyspepsia, diarrhea, nausea
Fatigue~0.2%Uncommon cause of discontinuation
Managing Hepatotransaminase Elevations

Fluvastatin-associated transaminase elevations are dose-related and tend to appear early: 91% of cases with persistent elevations (>3× ULN) occurred within 12 weeks of therapy initiation. In pooled analyses, the incidence was 0.2% at 20 mg/day, 1.5% at 40 mg/day, and 2.7% at 80 mg/day (given as 40 mg BID). The majority of affected patients were asymptomatic. If persistent elevations occur, consider dose reduction or discontinuation. Recheck liver enzymes before initiation and whenever clinically indicated.

Int

Drug Interactions

Fluvastatin is primarily metabolised by CYP2C9, with minor contributions from CYP3A4 and CYP2C8. This means that CYP3A4 inhibitors (erythromycin, ketoconazole, itraconazole) do not significantly affect fluvastatin pharmacokinetics — a major clinical advantage over lovastatin and simvastatin. However, CYP2C9 inhibitors (notably fluconazole) do increase fluvastatin exposure. Fluvastatin itself is a mild CYP2C9 inhibitor and an OATP1B1/1B3 and BCRP substrate.

MajorCyclosporine
MechanismLikely OATP1B1 inhibition and possibly CYP interaction; increases fluvastatin exposure
EffectElevated fluvastatin levels; increased myopathy risk
ManagementCap dose at 20 mg BID (capsule only); do not use XL tablet; avoid if possible
FDA PI
MajorFluconazole
MechanismPotent CYP2C9 inhibition; decreases fluvastatin clearance
EffectIncreased fluvastatin plasma concentration
ManagementCap dose at 20 mg BID (capsule only); do not use XL tablet; avoid if possible
FDA PI
MajorGemfibrozil
MechanismOATP1B1 inhibition; although PK interaction may be modest, pharmacodynamic myopathy risk is increased
EffectIncreased risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis
ManagementAvoid concomitant use; if fibrate needed, fenofibrate is preferred
FDA PI
ModerateOther Fibrates
MechanismIndependent myotoxicity; additive muscle risk with statin
EffectIncreased myopathy risk
ManagementUse with caution; monitor for muscle symptoms
FDA PI
ModerateNiacin (≥1 g/day)
MechanismPharmacodynamic synergy for skeletal muscle toxicity
EffectIncreased myopathy risk (though no myopathy seen in 74-patient clinical trial)
ManagementConsider dose reduction of fluvastatin; monitor for muscle symptoms
FDA PI
ModerateColchicine
MechanismIndependent myotoxicity; additive muscle risk
EffectIsolated post-marketing reports of myopathy including rhabdomyolysis
ManagementUse with caution; counsel on muscle symptom reporting
FDA PI / Post-marketing
MinorWarfarin
MechanismFluvastatin is a mild CYP2C9 inhibitor; warfarin is a CYP2C9 substrate
EffectPossible increase in prothrombin time / INR
ManagementMonitor PT/INR closely when initiating, discontinuing, or changing fluvastatin dose
FDA PI
MinorPhenytoin
MechanismMutual CYP2C9 interaction; phenytoin induces CYP; fluvastatin may inhibit phenytoin metabolism
EffectPotential change in phenytoin levels and/or fluvastatin efficacy
ManagementMonitor phenytoin plasma levels when starting or changing fluvastatin dose
FDA PI
MinorGlyburide
MechanismFluvastatin is a CYP2C9 inhibitor; glyburide is a CYP2C9 substrate
EffectPossible modest increase in glyburide levels and hypoglycaemia risk
ManagementMonitor blood glucose when changing fluvastatin dose
FDA PI
MinorCYP3A4 Inhibitors (ketoconazole, erythromycin, itraconazole)
MechanismCYP3A4 is a minor pathway for fluvastatin (~20%)
EffectNo significant change in fluvastatin pharmacokinetics
ManagementNo dose adjustment required — major advantage over lovastatin/simvastatin
FDA PI / PK studies
Key Advantage — CYP3A4 Independence

Because fluvastatin is primarily metabolised by CYP2C9 rather than CYP3A4, it avoids the numerous CYP3A4-mediated drug interactions that limit the use of lovastatin and simvastatin. Erythromycin, ketoconazole, itraconazole, and HIV protease inhibitors have no clinically significant effect on fluvastatin levels. This makes fluvastatin a useful option in patients on complex polypharmacy regimens involving CYP3A4 inhibitors.

Mon

Monitoring

  • Lipid PanelBaseline, 4–12 weeks, then annually
    Routine
    Fasting lipid profile (Total-C, LDL-C, HDL-C, TG). Maximum LDL-C response expected by 4 weeks at any given dose.
  • Liver Enzymes (ALT/AST)Before initiation; as clinically indicated
    Routine
    Obtain baseline transaminases before starting therapy. Repeat if symptoms of liver injury develop (fatigue, anorexia, jaundice, dark urine). The majority of persistent elevations appear within 12 weeks.
  • Creatine Kinase (CK)When clinically indicated
    Trigger-based
    Obtain if patient reports unexplained muscle pain, tenderness, or weakness. Consider baseline CK in patients with risk factors for myopathy (elderly, renal impairment, hypothyroidism, interacting drugs).
  • Fasting Glucose / HbA1cBaseline; periodically in at-risk patients
    Routine
    Statins may increase HbA1c and fasting glucose. Monitor for new-onset diabetes in patients with metabolic risk factors.
  • PT/INR (if on warfarin)When fluvastatin started, stopped, or dose changed
    Trigger-based
    Fluvastatin is a mild CYP2C9 inhibitor; may modestly increase warfarin effect. Monitor closely during dose transitions.
  • Phenytoin LevelsWhen fluvastatin initiated or dose changed
    Trigger-based
    Phenytoin is a CYP2C9 substrate with narrow therapeutic index. Check phenytoin trough levels when adding or adjusting fluvastatin.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Active liver disease or unexplained persistent transaminase elevations
  • Pregnancy — may cause fetal harm; discontinue immediately if pregnancy recognised
  • Breastfeeding — fluvastatin excreted in animal milk; potential for serious adverse effects in nursing infants
  • Hypersensitivity to fluvastatin or any excipient (post-marketing reports of anaphylaxis, angioedema, and Stevens-Johnson syndrome)

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Hepatic cirrhosis — AUC and Cmax increase ~2.5-fold; use only with close monitoring and at reduced dose
  • Concomitant cyclosporine or fluconazole at doses exceeding 20 mg BID — increased exposure requires specialist risk-benefit assessment
  • History of statin-associated myopathy or IMNM — may recur; consider non-statin alternatives

Use with Caution

  • Elderly patients (>65 years) — predisposing factor for myopathy; age alone does not alter PK, but comorbidities increase risk
  • Uncontrolled hypothyroidism — correct before starting therapy
  • Severe renal impairment — not studied at doses >40 mg; use caution at higher doses
  • Heavy alcohol use or history of liver disease — monitor closely
  • Patients undergoing major surgery or with conditions predisposing to rhabdomyolysis (sepsis, hypotension, trauma, uncontrolled seizures) — consider temporary discontinuation
FDA Class-Wide Regulatory Warning Statins and Myopathy/Rhabdomyolysis

All statins carry the risk of myopathy, defined as muscle pain or weakness with CK >10× ULN. In rare cases, rhabdomyolysis with myoglobinuria and acute renal failure can occur, which may be fatal. Risk factors include advanced age (>65), renal impairment, uncontrolled hypothyroidism, and concomitant use of certain interacting drugs. Patients should be advised to report unexplained muscle symptoms promptly. For fluvastatin, the specific dose caps with cyclosporine and fluconazole (max 20 mg BID capsule) must be observed.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Fluvastatin helps lower cholesterol levels in the blood, which reduces the build-up of fatty deposits in blood vessel walls and lowers the risk of heart attack, stroke, and the need for procedures to open blocked arteries. It works best when combined with a heart-healthy diet, regular physical activity, and weight management. The medication must be taken long-term to maintain its benefits.

How to Take

Fluvastatin capsules (20 or 40 mg) should be taken in the evening. The extended-release tablet (80 mg) can be taken at any time of day, with or without food. Swallow the XL tablet whole — do not crush, chew, or break it. Do not open capsules. Do not take two 40 mg capsules at the same time; if your prescriber wants you to take 80 mg daily, use the XL tablet or take one 40 mg capsule in the evening and one in the morning.

Muscle Pain or Weakness
Tell patientMild muscle aches can occur but are usually not serious. However, in rare cases, statin therapy can cause significant muscle damage. Report any unexplained muscle pain, tenderness, or weakness to your prescriber, especially if accompanied by fever, feeling unwell, or dark-coloured urine.
Call prescriberIf persistent or worsening muscle pain develops, particularly with fever, malaise, or dark brown urine — seek medical attention promptly.
Liver Effects
Tell patientBlood tests may be done before and during treatment to check liver function. Serious liver problems are very rare, but you should know the warning signs.
Call prescriberIf you develop unusual fatigue, loss of appetite, upper abdominal discomfort, dark urine, or yellowing of skin or eyes.
Digestive Symptoms
Tell patientStomach discomfort, heartburn, nausea, or diarrhea may occur when starting fluvastatin. These symptoms are usually mild and tend to improve within the first few weeks.
Call prescriberIf symptoms are severe, persistent beyond 4 weeks, or interfere with daily activities.
Drug Interactions
Tell patientInform all healthcare providers that you take fluvastatin before starting any new medication. Unlike some other statins, fluvastatin has fewer interaction concerns with common antibiotics and antifungals, but some drugs (particularly fluconazole and cyclosporine) require dose adjustments.
Call prescriberBefore starting any new antifungal medication, immunosuppressant, or cholesterol-lowering combination therapy.
Pregnancy and Contraception
Tell patientFluvastatin must not be taken during pregnancy as it may harm the developing baby. Women of childbearing potential should use effective contraception during treatment.
Call prescriberIf you become pregnant or plan to become pregnant — fluvastatin should be stopped immediately.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. LESCOL/LESCOL XL (fluvastatin sodium) — Full Prescribing Information. Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation. Revised 02/2012. FDA DailyMedPrimary reference for indications, dosing, pharmacokinetics, drug interactions, and adverse reactions from placebo-controlled trials.
  2. LESCOL XL (fluvastatin sodium) — Prescribing Information. Updated 2023. FDA DailyMedMost recent label update including revised pregnancy/lactation language and IMNM warning.
  3. Fluvastatin Capsules USP — Prescribing Information. Teva Pharmaceuticals. DailyMedGeneric fluvastatin capsule label with updated adverse reactions and IMNM post-marketing data.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Serruys PWJC, de Feyter P, Macaya C, et al. Fluvastatin for prevention of cardiac events following successful first percutaneous coronary intervention: a randomized controlled trial (LIPS). JAMA. 2002;287(24):3215-3222. doi:10.1001/jama.287.24.3215Landmark 1677-patient LIPS trial demonstrating 22% relative risk reduction in MACE with fluvastatin 80 mg/day post-PCI over median 3.9 years.
  2. Herd JA, Ballantyne CM, Farmer JA, et al. Effects of fluvastatin on coronary atherosclerosis in patients with mild to moderate cholesterol elevations (LCAS). Am J Cardiol. 1997;80(3):278-286. doi:10.1016/S0002-9149(97)00346-9Lipoprotein and Coronary Atherosclerosis Study showing fluvastatin slowed progression and increased regression of coronary lesions.
Guidelines
  1. Grundy SM, Stone NJ, Bailey AL, et al. 2018 AHA/ACC/AACVPR/AAPA/ABC/ACPM/ADA/AGS/APhA/ASPC/NLA/PCNA Guideline on the Management of Blood Cholesterol. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019;73(24):e285-e350. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2018.11.003Current US cholesterol guideline classifying fluvastatin 40 mg BID / 80 mg XL as moderate-intensity and lower doses as low-intensity.
  2. Newman CB, Preiss D, Tobert JA, et al. Statin Safety and Associated Adverse Events: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2019;39(2):e52-e81. doi:10.1161/ATV.0000000000000073Comprehensive AHA review of statin safety including myopathy risk factors and hepatic/diabetogenic effects relevant to all statins.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Scripture CD, Pieper JA. Clinical pharmacokinetics of fluvastatin. Clin Pharmacokinet. 2001;40(4):263-281. doi:10.2165/00003088-200140040-00003Definitive PK review detailing CYP2C9-predominant metabolism, drug interaction profile, and the CYP3A4 independence of fluvastatin.
  2. Transon C, Leemann T, Dayer P. In vitro comparative inhibition profiles of major human drug metabolising cytochrome P450 isozymes (CYP2C9, CYP2D6 and CYP3A4) by HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors. Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 1996;50(3):209-215. doi:10.1007/s002280050094In vitro study demonstrating fluvastatin’s inhibitory effects on CYP2C9 and relative sparing of CYP3A4.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Tse FL, Jaffe JM, Troendle A. Pharmacokinetics of fluvastatin after single and multiple doses in normal volunteers. J Clin Pharmacol. 1992;32(7):630-638. PMID: 1640002Primary PK study establishing fluvastatin’s half-life, bioavailability, and dose-proportional pharmacokinetics in healthy subjects.
  2. Niemi M, Pasanen MK, Neuvonen PJ. Enantiospecific pharmacogenomics of fluvastatin. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2019;106(3):668-680. doi:10.1002/cpt.1466Pharmacogenomic study showing CYP2C9*3 markedly increases fluvastatin exposure and SLCO1B1 has enantiospecific effects.
  3. LiverTox: Clinical and Research Information on Drug-Induced Liver Injury. NIDDK. Fluvastatin. NCBI BookshelfNIH resource on fluvastatin hepatotoxicity patterns, dose-dependent transaminase elevations, and rare clinical liver injury.
  4. Hirota T, Ieiri I. Drug-drug interactions that interfere with statin metabolism. Expert Opin Drug Metab Toxicol. 2015;11(9):1435-1447. doi:10.1517/17425255.2015.1064890Review of statin metabolic pathways and transporter-mediated interactions, highlighting fluvastatin’s CYP2C9 dependence.