Literature DB >> 15801941

Ineffectiveness of lipid-lowering therapy in primary care.

E Van Ganse1, T Souchet, L Laforest, P Moulin, M Bertrand, P Le Jeunne, N Travier, D Yin, E Alemao, G de Pouvourville.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Evidence confirms the positive effects of lipid-lowering agents on the risk of cardiovascular disease. Local guidelines in France (AFSSAPS) have defined therapeutic objectives for LDL-cholesterol. These objectives vary with the number of cardiovascular risk factors in addition to dyslipidaemia. We determined the proportions of patients at therapeutic objective in different classes of cardiovascular risk to test the hypothesis that compliance with guidelines varies across the levels of risk. Comparison with international guidelines (ANDEM) was also performed.
METHODS: A group of 3173 dyslipidaemic patients treated with lipid-lowering agents and managed by general practitioners was randomly selected from BKL-Thales panel, a French computerized database. For each patient, history of coronary heart disease and the number of cardiovascular risk factors were documented. Compliance with guidelines was assessed from achievement of therapeutic objective.
RESULTS: The study population included 79% primary prevention patients (1.6, 25.5, 31.7 and 20.1%, with 1, 2, 3, and >3 risk factors, respectively) and 21.0% secondary prevention patients. Applying AFSSAPS guidelines, the proportions of primary prevention patients not at LDL-cholesterol objectives varied across risk categories (P < 0.0001), from 3.9% for patients with one risk factor to 46.5% for patients with >3 risk factors, and therapeutic failure reached 39.9% in secondary prevention. Only 26% of patients who were at high cardiovascular risk (>3 risk factors or prior coronary heart disease) and not at therapeutic objective received high doses (>standard recommended doses) of lipid-lowering agents in monotherapy. Applying ANDEM guidelines, 74% of secondary prevention patients were not at treatment goal.
CONCLUSION: Compliance with guidelines varied inversely with the level of cardiovascular risk. Besides, most patients not at therapeutic objective were not up-titrated. The use of lipid-lowering agents is inadequate, depriving many patients of an effective protection against cardiovascular diseases.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15801941      PMCID: PMC1884807          DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2125.2005.02266.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol        ISSN: 0306-5251            Impact factor:   4.335


  19 in total

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  4 in total

1.  Trends in prescribing and utilization of statins and other lipid lowering drugs across Europe 1997-2003.

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2.  Lipid-modifying therapy and attainment of cholesterol goals in Hungary: the return on expenditure achieved for lipid therapy (REALITY) study.

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3.  Dyslipidemia: The untreated metabolic dysfunction in people with type 2 diabetes in Latin America. ARETAEUS study outcomes.

Authors:  Juan José Gagliardino; Rosario Arechavaleta; Freddy Goldberg Eliaschewitz; Kristy Iglay; Kimberly Brodovicz; Claudio D Gonzalez; Shengsheng Yu; R Ravi Shankar; Olaf Heisel; Paul Keown; Kaan Tunceli
Journal:  J Clin Transl Endocrinol       Date:  2019-01-25

4.  Mixed dyslipidemias in primary care patients in France.

Authors:  Laurent Laforest; Baishali M Ambegaonkar; Thierry Souchet; Vasilisa Sazonov; Eric Van Ganse
Journal:  Vasc Health Risk Manag       Date:  2012-04-19
  4 in total

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