I've been ordering ApoB levels on all my patients on GLP-1/GIP agonists and the results are consistently impressive. But a few cases have me asking a provocative question: can tirzepatide rival moderate-intensity statins for ApoB reduction in certain patients?
Here are 4 representative cases (all on tirzepatide 10-15 mg, no concurrent statin):
| Patient | Baseline ApoB (mg/dL) | 6-Month ApoB (mg/dL) | % Change | LDL-C Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient A (52M, BMI 38) | 142 | 98 | -31% | 148 → 112 |
| Patient B (46F, BMI 34) | 128 | 94 | -27% | 134 → 104 |
| Patient C (58M, BMI 41) | 156 | 118 | -24% | 162 → 128 |
| Patient D (39F, BMI 33) | 118 | 82 | -31% | 122 → 92 |
For context, moderate-intensity statins (atorvastatin 10-20 mg, rosuvastatin 5-10 mg) typically reduce ApoB by 25-35%. High-intensity statins (atorvastatin 40-80 mg, rosuvastatin 20-40 mg) reduce ApoB by 40-55%.
So in patients with high baseline TGs and metabolic syndrome, tirzepatide is producing ApoB reductions that overlap with moderate-intensity statin territory. The mechanism is different — statins work primarily through LDL receptor upregulation, while GLP-1/GIP agonists reduce VLDL production and improve hepatic insulin sensitivity — but the end result on atherogenic particle number is comparable.
This is NOT to say that tirzepatide should replace statins. But it does raise the question of whether some patients on dual therapy might be getting more ApoB reduction than we realize.