Issue: May 2014
March 19, 2014
4 min read
Save

Millions more now eligible for statins under new cholesterol guidelines

Issue: May 2014
You've successfully added to your alerts. You will receive an email when new content is published.

Click Here to Manage Email Alerts

We were unable to process your request. Please try again later. If you continue to have this issue please contact customerservice@slackinc.com.

The 2013 guidelines of the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association for the treatment of cholesterol increase the number of US adults eligible for statin therapy by 12.8 million, compared with the prior guidelines.

According to a new report, the increase in those eligible for statins is mostly among older adults aged 60 to 75 years without CVD.

Michael J. Pencina, PhD, from Duke Clinical Research Institute and colleagues reviewed data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES) of 2005 to 2010, which was selected because it is designed to provide a representative sample of the US civilian noninstitutionalized population, according to the study background.

Results extrapolated

The researchers obtained data from 3,773 survey participants aged 40 to 75 years who had fasting data available and triglyceride levels <400 mg/dL. They determined the proportion of the participants that would be eligible for statin therapy under the new ACC/AHA guidelines for cholesterol management updated in 2013 and under the guidelines of the Third Adult Treatment Panel (ATP III) of the National Cholesterol Education Program updated in 2004. The results were then extrapolated to the population of 115.4 million US adults aged 40 to 75 years with triglyceride levels <400 mg/dL.

Overall, 56 million US adults, or 48.6% of the population, would be eligible for statin therapy based on the ACC/AHA guidelines compared with 43.2 million (37.5%) based on the ATP III guidelines, an increase of 12.8 million people since publication of the new guidelines.

The researchers calculated that 10.4 million of the 12.8 million adults eligible for statin therapy would occur among adults without CVD. Among adults aged 60 to 75 years without CVD and not currently receiving statin therapy, statin eligibility jumped from 30.4% under the ATP III guidelines to 87.4% under the ACC/AHA guidelines for men and from 21.2% under the ATP III guidelines to 53.6% under the ACC/AHA guidelines among women.

Ten-year risk a major factor

The researchers wrote that this effect “would largely be driven by an increased number of adults who would be classified solely on the basis of their 10-year risk for a [CV] event. Those who would be newly eligible for statin therapy include more men than women and persons with a higher [BP], but a markedly lower level of [LDL].”

The new ACC/AHA guidelines recommend statin therapy for more adults expected to have future CV events, but also many adults who would not have future events, the researchers wrote. In that guideline, statin therapy is recommended for four groups: people with atherosclerotic CVD, people with LDL ≥190 mg/dL, people aged 40 to 75 years with type 2 diabetes and people aged 40 to 75 years with an estimated 10-year risk for CVD ≥7.5%, as determined by a risk calculator developed for the guidelines.

According to Pencina and colleagues, eligibility may not translate into treatment recommendation for all people, because “the new guidelines call for an informed risk-benefit discussion between patient and physician before the initiation of statin therapy” and “a lack of universal implementation” is possible.

Disclosure: See the full study for a list of the researchers’ relevant financial disclosures.