Drug Monograph

Pitavastatin

Brand names: Livalo (pitavastatin calcium), Zypitamag (pitavastatin magnesium)

HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitor (Statin)·Oral
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
~12 h
Metabolism
UGT1A3/UGT2B7 (lactonization); minimal CYP2C9/CYP2C8
Protein Binding
>99%
Bioavailability
51% (oral solution, FDA PI)
Volume of Distribution
148 L
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Statin (HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor)
Available Doses
1, 2, 4 mg tablets
Route
Oral
Renal Adjustment
Moderate (eGFR 30–59) & ESRD on HD: start 1 mg, max 2 mg/day
Hepatic Adjustment
Contraindicated in acute liver failure or decompensated cirrhosis
Pregnancy
May cause fetal harm; discontinue when pregnancy recognised
Lactation
Breastfeeding not recommended
Schedule / Legal Status
Prescription only (Rx)
Generic Available
Yes (Zypitamag)
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Primary hyperlipidaemiaAdultsAdjunctive to dietFDA Approved
Heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia (heFH)Adults and paediatric patients ≥8 yearsAdjunctive to dietFDA Approved

Pitavastatin was approved by the FDA in 2009 and is the most recently introduced statin to the US market. The 2018 AHA/ACC cholesterol guideline classifies pitavastatin 2–4 mg as moderate-intensity statin therapy (expected ~30–45% LDL-C reduction). A key clinical advantage is its minimal cytochrome P450 metabolism, which makes it particularly suitable for patients on complex drug regimens, including those receiving antiretroviral therapy for HIV. The landmark REPRIEVE trial (NEJM 2023) demonstrated a 35% reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events with pitavastatin 4 mg in people living with HIV, establishing its role in primary CV prevention for this population.

Off-Label Uses

Primary CV prevention in people living with HIV: The REPRIEVE trial (7,769 participants, NEJM 2023) showed a 35% MACE reduction with pitavastatin 4 mg. DHHS guidelines now recommend statin therapy for this population. Pitavastatin was chosen specifically because it does not interact with antiretrovirals via CYP3A4 (Evidence quality: High — RCT).

Statin-intolerant patients: Some data suggest pitavastatin may be tolerated by patients who have experienced myalgia with other statins, though this is not well-established in large trials (Evidence quality: Low).

Dose

Dosing

Adult Dosing

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Primary hyperlipidaemia — standard initiation2 mg once daily2–4 mg once daily4 mg/dayTake at same time each day with or without food
Assess LDL-C as early as 4 weeks; titrate if needed
Primary CV prevention in HIV (REPRIEVE protocol)4 mg once daily4 mg once daily4 mg/daySelected for minimal interaction with ART
REPRIEVE used pitavastatin calcium 4 mg; no dose titration
Patient needing low-intensity therapy or initial tolerability assessment1 mg once daily1–2 mg once daily4 mg/dayConsider for patients previously intolerant of other statins
Co-administration with erythromycin1 mg once daily1 mg once daily1 mg/dayErythromycin increases pitavastatin AUC ~2.8-fold (FDA PI)
Co-administration with rifampin1 mg once daily1–2 mg once daily2 mg/dayRifampin increases pitavastatin peak exposure (FDA PI)
Moderate renal impairment (eGFR 30–59) or ESRD on haemodialysis1 mg once daily1–2 mg once daily2 mg/dayAUC ~2-fold higher in moderate renal impairment; ~86% higher in ESRD
Haemodialysis does not clear pitavastatin due to >99% protein binding; severe impairment (eGFR 15–29) shows less exposure increase (~36%)

Paediatric Dosing (heFH, ≥8 years)

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia2 mg once daily2–4 mg once daily4 mg/dayDose-dependent increase in plasma concentrations at 2 and 4 mg
Titrate at 4-week intervals based on LDL-C response
Clinical Pearl — No CYP3A4 Limitation

Unlike lovastatin, simvastatin, and to some extent atorvastatin, pitavastatin is not significantly metabolised by CYP3A4. Its primary metabolic pathway is glucuronidation via UGT enzymes, with only minor involvement of CYP2C9 and CYP2C8. This means pitavastatin can be used safely with potent CYP3A4 inhibitors such as HIV protease inhibitors, azole antifungals, and macrolide antibiotics (except erythromycin, which increases pitavastatin exposure through a transporter-mediated mechanism). The maximum recommended dose is 4 mg/day; doses above this were associated with increased myopathy risk in premarketing studies.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Pitavastatin is a synthetic HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor that competitively blocks the conversion of HMG-CoA to mevalonate, the rate-limiting step in hepatic cholesterol biosynthesis. By depleting intracellular cholesterol, pitavastatin upregulates LDL receptor expression on hepatocyte surfaces, accelerating clearance of LDL-C from the circulation. It also reduces VLDL production and has favourable effects on HDL-C, with some evidence suggesting more robust HDL raising compared to other statins at equivalent LDL-lowering doses. Pitavastatin contains a cyclopropyl group in its structure that confers metabolic stability and resistance to CYP3A4-mediated breakdown. Beyond lipid effects, the REPRIEVE trial demonstrated that pitavastatin reduces coronary plaque progression and arterial inflammation in people living with HIV.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionTmax ~1 h; absolute bioavailability 51% (oral solution); absorbed mainly in small intestineHighest bioavailability and fastest Tmax of all statins; high-fat meal decreases Cmax by 43% but does not significantly affect AUC
DistributionProtein binding >99% (albumin, alpha-1 acid glycoprotein); Vd 148 LExtensive protein binding; haemodialysis ineffective for removal
MetabolismPrimarily UGT1A3/UGT2B7 (lactonization); minimal CYP2C9 and CYP2C8; not significantly metabolised by CYP3A4; OATP1B1 substrateMajor advantage: CYP3A4 inhibitors do not significantly alter exposure; erythromycin increases AUC ~2.8-fold via transporter inhibition; OATP1B1 polymorphisms may affect levels
Eliminationt½ ~12 h; 79% faeces, 15% urineLonger half-life than lovastatin/fluvastatin; can be dosed at any time of day (morning or evening)
SE

Side Effects

1–10%Common
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Myalgia1.5–3.1%Dose-related; most common cause of discontinuation at 4 mg (0.5%)
Constipation1.5–3.6%Dose-related; higher at 4 mg; increase dietary fibre and fluid intake
Back pain1.5–2.6%Not dose-related; comparable to placebo in some dose groups
Diarrhea1.5–2.6%Usually mild and self-limiting
Pain in extremity0.6–2.1%Dose-related; higher at 4 mg; distinguish from myopathy symptoms
Headache1–2%Reported in clinical trials; typically transient
Influenza1–2%Reported in clinical trials; not clearly drug-related
Nasopharyngitis1–2%Reported in clinical trials; not clearly drug-related
SeriousSerious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Myopathy / RhabdomyolysisRare; risk increases >4 mg/dayWeeks to months; dose-dependentDiscontinue immediately; check CK and renal function; doses >4 mg associated with increased severe myopathy in premarketing studies
Immune-mediated necrotising myopathy (IMNM)Very rare (post-marketing)Months to years; persists after discontinuationDiscontinue; anti-HMG-CoA reductase antibody testing; rheumatology referral; immunosuppressive therapy may be needed
HepatotoxicityRare (post-marketing reports including fatal cases)VariableStop pitavastatin; investigate alternative aetiologies; do not rechallenge if serious liver injury confirmed
New-onset diabetes mellitusUncommon (class effect)Months to yearsContinue statin (CV benefit outweighs risk); manage diabetes per guidelines; HbA1c and fasting glucose elevations reported
Hypersensitivity reactions (rash, pruritus, urticaria, angioedema)RareVariableDiscontinue if significant; emergency treatment for angioedema
Interstitial lung diseaseVery rare (post-marketing)VariableDiscontinue; specialist referral; reported with several statins as class effect
DiscontinuationDiscontinuation Rates
Controlled Studies + Extensions (3,291 patients)
3.3–3.9%
By dose: 3.9% (1 mg), 3.3% (2 mg), 3.7% (4 mg)
Most Common Reasons for D/C at 4 mg
CK elevation 0.6%; myalgia 0.5%
Note: Discontinuation rates comparable across dose groups; low overall
Dose Ceiling — Do Not Exceed 4 mg/day

Dosages of pitavastatin greater than 4 mg once daily were associated with an increased risk of severe myopathy in premarketing clinical studies. The maximum recommended dose is therefore 4 mg daily. For patients requiring higher-intensity LDL-C lowering beyond what pitavastatin 4 mg can achieve, the FDA PI recommends prescribing an alternative LDL-C-lowering treatment rather than exceeding this dose cap.

Int

Drug Interactions

Pitavastatin is primarily metabolised by glucuronidation (UGT1A3/UGT2B7), not by cytochrome P450 enzymes. It is an OATP1B1 substrate, which is the main transporter-mediated route of hepatic uptake. Because CYP3A4 plays no significant role in pitavastatin metabolism, many common drug interactions seen with lovastatin and simvastatin do not apply. However, drugs that inhibit OATP1B1 (such as cyclosporine) can substantially increase pitavastatin exposure.

MajorCyclosporine
MechanismOATP1B1 inhibition; significantly increases pitavastatin exposure
EffectMarkedly elevated pitavastatin levels; high myopathy/rhabdomyolysis risk
ManagementCONTRAINDICATED — do not use pitavastatin with cyclosporine
FDA PI
MajorErythromycin
MechanismTransporter-mediated (likely OATP1B1); increases pitavastatin AUC ~2.8-fold
EffectSignificantly increased pitavastatin exposure and myopathy risk
ManagementLimit pitavastatin to 1 mg daily; consider azithromycin as alternative
FDA PI
MajorGemfibrozil
MechanismOATP1B1 inhibition; increases statin exposure and myotoxicity risk
EffectIncreased risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis
ManagementAvoid concomitant use; if fibrate needed, fenofibrate is preferred
FDA PI
ModerateRifampin
MechanismIncreases peak pitavastatin exposure (transporter interaction)
EffectIncreased Cmax; potential for increased myopathy risk
ManagementLimit pitavastatin to 2 mg daily with rifampin
FDA PI
ModerateNiacin (≥1 g/day) / Other Fibrates
MechanismIndependent myotoxicity; additive muscle risk
EffectIncreased risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis
ManagementUse with caution; weigh benefit vs risk; monitor for muscle symptoms
FDA PI
ModerateColchicine
MechanismIndependent myotoxicity; additive muscle risk
EffectCases of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis reported with statin-colchicine combinations
ManagementUse with caution; counsel on muscle symptom reporting
FDA PI
MinorWarfarin
MechanismNo significant PK or PD interaction
EffectNo effect on PT/INR in clinical study with chronic warfarin patients
ManagementRoutine monitoring; FDA PI recommends checking PT/INR when starting pitavastatin
FDA PI
MinorHIV Protease Inhibitors / CYP3A4 Inhibitors
MechanismCYP3A4 is not a significant pathway for pitavastatin metabolism
EffectNo clinically significant interaction expected (basis for REPRIEVE trial selection)
ManagementNo dose adjustment required — major advantage for HIV and transplant patients
FDA PI / REPRIEVE
Key Advantage — Safe with Antiretrovirals

Pitavastatin was specifically chosen for the REPRIEVE trial because it does not interact with antiretroviral drugs via CYP3A4. This gives it a unique position among statins for use in people living with HIV, where protease inhibitors, NNRTIs, and pharmacokinetic boosters (ritonavir, cobicistat) would significantly increase the exposure of CYP3A4-dependent statins like lovastatin and simvastatin.

Mon

Monitoring

  • Lipid PanelBaseline, as early as 4 weeks, then periodically
    Routine
    Fasting lipid profile (LDL-C, HDL-C, Total-C, TG). Adjust dose if LDL-C goal not achieved at 4 weeks. For patients unable to reach goal on 4 mg, prescribe alternative therapy.
  • Liver Enzymes (ALT/AST)Before initiation; as clinically indicated
    Routine
    Obtain baseline transaminases. Repeat if symptoms of liver injury develop (fatigue, anorexia, jaundice, dark urine). Rare post-marketing reports of fatal and non-fatal hepatic failure.
  • Creatine Kinase (CK)When clinically indicated
    Trigger-based
    Measure if patient reports unexplained muscle pain, tenderness, or weakness. CK elevation (0.6% at 4 mg) was the most common lab reason for discontinuation in trials.
  • Fasting Glucose / HbA1cBaseline; periodically in at-risk patients
    Routine
    HbA1c and fasting glucose elevations reported with pitavastatin (class effect). Monitor for new-onset diabetes in patients with metabolic risk factors.
  • Renal FunctionBaseline; if rhabdomyolysis suspected
    Trigger-based
    Assess eGFR before starting to guide dose selection. AUC approximately doubles in moderate renal impairment (eGFR 30–59) and is 86% higher in ESRD — start 1 mg and cap at 2 mg/day for these populations.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Concomitant use of cyclosporine — significantly increases pitavastatin exposure
  • Acute liver failure or decompensated cirrhosis
  • Hypersensitivity to pitavastatin or any excipient (angioedema, rash, pruritus, urticaria reported)
  • Pregnancy — may cause fetal harm; discontinue when pregnancy recognised
  • Breastfeeding — not recommended based on mechanism of action

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Moderate hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh B) — AUC 3.8-fold and Cmax 2.7-fold higher; half-life increases to ~15 h; use only with close monitoring
  • Moderate renal impairment (eGFR 30–59) or ESRD on haemodialysis at doses >2 mg/day — AUC up to ~2-fold higher; start 1 mg, max 2 mg per FDA PI
  • History of statin-associated myopathy or IMNM

Use with Caution

  • Elderly patients (≥65 years) — predisposing factor for myopathy; PK shows ~30% higher AUC vs younger adults
  • Uncontrolled hypothyroidism — correct before starting therapy
  • Concomitant erythromycin — cap at 1 mg/day
  • Concomitant rifampin — cap at 2 mg/day
  • Major surgery or conditions predisposing to rhabdomyolysis (sepsis, hypotension, trauma) — 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 acute renal failure can occur, which may be fatal. For pitavastatin specifically, doses greater than 4 mg/day were associated with increased risk of severe myopathy in premarketing studies. Risk factors include advanced age (≥65), renal impairment, uncontrolled hypothyroidism, and concomitant use of drugs that increase pitavastatin exposure (cyclosporine is contraindicated; erythromycin and rifampin require dose caps).

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Pitavastatin helps lower cholesterol levels in the blood, which reduces the risk of heart attack, stroke, and other cardiovascular events. For people living with HIV, pitavastatin has been shown to reduce the risk of heart disease beyond what cholesterol lowering alone would predict. It works best when combined with a heart-healthy diet, regular physical activity, and weight management.

How to Take

Take pitavastatin once daily at the same time each day, with or without food. It can be taken in the morning or evening. Swallow the tablet whole. Do not use cyclosporine while taking pitavastatin. The maximum dose is 4 mg daily.

Muscle Pain or Weakness
Tell patientMild muscle aches may occur and 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 symptoms develop, 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.
Call prescriberIf you develop unusual fatigue, loss of appetite, upper abdominal discomfort, dark urine, or yellowing of skin or eyes.
GI Symptoms
Tell patientConstipation and diarrhea are among the most common side effects. Increase fluid and fibre intake if constipation occurs. These symptoms usually improve with continued therapy.
Call prescriberIf symptoms are severe, persistent, or interfere with daily activities.
Drug Interactions
Tell patientInform all healthcare providers that you take pitavastatin before starting any new medication. Pitavastatin has fewer drug interactions than many other statins, but some medicines (especially cyclosporine) must not be used together.
Call prescriberBefore starting any new antibiotic (especially erythromycin), TB medication (rifampin), or immunosuppressant.
Pregnancy and Contraception
Tell patientPitavastatin may harm a developing baby. Women of childbearing potential should use effective contraception during treatment.
Call prescriberIf you become pregnant or plan to become pregnant — pitavastatin should be stopped immediately.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. LIVALO (pitavastatin calcium) tablets — Full Prescribing Information. Kowa Pharmaceuticals America, Inc. Revised January 2024. FDA DailyMedPrimary reference for dosing, PK, drug interactions, adverse reactions, contraindications, and the 4 mg dose ceiling.
  2. ZYPITAMAG (pitavastatin magnesium) tablets — Prescribing Information. Medicure Inc. Revised January 2024. DailyMedGeneric pitavastatin magnesium salt label with updated IMNM and hypersensitivity post-marketing data.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Grinspoon SK, Fitch KV, Zanni MV, et al. Pitavastatin to Prevent Cardiovascular Disease in HIV Infection (REPRIEVE). N Engl J Med. 2023;389(8):687-699. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2304146Landmark 7,769-patient RCT demonstrating 35% reduction in MACE with pitavastatin 4 mg in people living with HIV over median 5.1 years; stopped early for efficacy.
  2. Grinspoon SK, Fitch KV, Zanni MV, et al. Trial Update of Pitavastatin to Prevent Cardiovascular Events in HIV Infection. N Engl J Med. 2024;391(14):1375-1377. doi:10.1056/NEJMc2400870Updated REPRIEVE analysis confirming consistent efficacy over 5.6 years follow-up with NNT of 100; led to revised DHHS treatment guidelines.
  3. Budinski D, Arneson V, Hounslow N, Gratsiansky N. Pitavastatin compared with atorvastatin in primary hypercholesterolemia or combined dyslipidemia. Clin Lipidol. 2009;4:291-302.Active-controlled non-inferiority trial comparing pitavastatin 4 mg to atorvastatin 20 mg for LDL-C lowering efficacy.
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 pitavastatin 2–4 mg as moderate-intensity statin therapy.
  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 class safety including myopathy risk factors and metabolic effects.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Hirano M, Maeda K, Shitara Y, Sugiyama Y. Drug-drug interaction between pitavastatin and various drugs via OATP1B1. Drug Metab Dispos. 2006;34(7):1229-1236. doi:10.1124/dmd.106.009290Key study demonstrating OATP1B1-mediated hepatic uptake of pitavastatin and the transporter basis for drug interactions.
  2. Freiberg MS. HIV and Cardiovascular Disease — An Ounce of Prevention. N Engl J Med. 2023;389(8):760-761. doi:10.1056/NEJMe2306778Editorial accompanying REPRIEVE discussing the significance of statin therapy for CV prevention in HIV.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Kalliokoski A, Niemi M. Impact of OATP transporters on pharmacokinetics. Br J Pharmacol. 2009;158(3):693-705. doi:10.1111/j.1476-5381.2009.00430.xReview of OATP transporter pharmacology relevant to pitavastatin hepatic uptake and drug interaction mechanisms.
  2. LiverTox: Clinical and Research Information on Drug-Induced Liver Injury. NIDDK. Pitavastatin. NCBI BookshelfNIH resource on pitavastatin hepatotoxicity patterns and rare post-marketing hepatic failure reports.
  3. Kolossváry M, Schnittman SR, Zanni MV, et al. Pitavastatin, Procollagen Pathways, and Plaque Stabilization in Patients With HIV: A Secondary Analysis of the REPRIEVE Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Cardiol. 2024;9(4):367-377. doi:10.1001/jamacardio.2024.0069REPRIEVE mechanistic substudy showing pitavastatin reduces coronary plaque progression and upregulates procollagen pathways.