Literature DB >> 18695423

Exploring the gap between National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines and clinical practice in secondary care: results of a cross-sectional study involving over 10 000 patients followed in different specialty settings across Italy.

Claudio Rapezzi1, Elena Biagini, Paolo Bellis, Massimo Cafiero, Mario Velussi, Antonio Ceriello, Robin M T Cooke, Carlo Schweiger.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate implementation of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) control recommendations in secondary care and explore key points in the decisional workup. METHODS AND
RESULTS: In a nationwide survey of secondary-care outpatients (n=11,124), we studied prevalence/predictors of (1) LDL-C value availability; (2) ongoing treatment with statins; (3) achievement of US National Cholesterol Education Program III target LDL-C values. Agreement between US National Cholesterol Education Program III risk category and physicians' personal risk assessments was also studied. LDL-C values were available for 78% evaluable patients; 71% of the patients with dyslipidema were undergoing treatment with statins; 34% patients undergoing treatment had target LDL-C values. At regression analysis, non-availability of LDL-C values was predicted by absence of diabetes, presence of normotension, and advancing age; lack of statins treatment by female sex, diabetes, overweight and northern location (southern location predicted treatment); non-achievement of target LDL-C values by age, diabetes, attending a diabetic clinic, cigarette smoking, history of cardiovascular disease, and taking less than six pills per day. Physicians provided underestimates of patients' risk (39% high-risk patients were rated as intermediate-risk patients and a further 10% as low-risk patients).
CONCLUSION: Suboptimal prevention practice seems to be associated with various factors acting at different levels within the complex process running from individual risk-level ascertainment to LDL-C target achievement. Multicomponent interventions that target the different key steps need to be considered.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18695423     DOI: 10.2459/JCM.0b013e3282f56513

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cardiovasc Med (Hagerstown)        ISSN: 1558-2027            Impact factor:   2.160


  4 in total

1.  Improving clinician self-efficacy does not increase asthma guideline use by primary care clinicians.

Authors:  Michelle M Cloutier; Howard Tennen; Dorothy B Wakefield; Kevin Brazil; Charles B Hall
Journal:  Acad Pediatr       Date:  2012-05-26       Impact factor: 3.107

2.  Statins and Aspirin use in HIV-infected people: gap between European AIDS Clinical Society guidelines and clinical practice: the results from HIV-HY study.

Authors:  Giuseppe Vittorio De Socio; Elena Ricci; Giustino Parruti; Leonardo Calza; Paolo Maggi; Benedetto Maurizio Celesia; Giancarlo Orofino; Giordano Madeddu; Canio Martinelli; Barbara Menzaghi; Lucia Taramasso; Giovanni Penco; Laura Carenzi; Marco Franzetti; Paolo Bonfanti
Journal:  Infection       Date:  2016-04-05       Impact factor: 3.553

3.  The clinical benefit of implementing guidelines in cardiovascular disease prevention in real world settings.

Authors:  Vasilios G Athyros; Thomas D Gossios; Niki Katsiki; Asterios Karagiannis; Dimitri P Mikhailidis
Journal:  Arch Med Sci       Date:  2012-02-29       Impact factor: 3.318

4.  GOAL Canada: Physician Education and Support Can Improve Patient Management.

Authors:  Anatoly Langer; Mary Tan; Shaun G Goodman; Jean Grégoire; Peter J Lin; G B John Mancini; James A Stone; Cheryll Wills; Caroline Spindler; Lawrence A Leiter
Journal:  CJC Open       Date:  2019-12-28
  4 in total

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