| Literature DB >> 28466399 |
Robert S Rosenson1, Shravanthi R Gandra2, Jan McKendrick3, Ricardo Dent2, Heather Wieffer3, Lung-I Cheng2, Alberico L Catapano4, Paul Oh5, G Kees Hovingh6, Erik S Stroes6.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Statins are the first-choice pharmacological treatment for patients with hypercholesterolemia and at risk for cardiovascular disease; however, a minority of patients experience statin-associated symptoms (SAS) and are considered to have reduced statin tolerance. The objective of this study was to establish how patients with SAS are identified and managed in clinical practice in Austria, Belgium, Colombia, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Portugal, Switzerland, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical practice; Hypercholesterolemia; Reduced statin tolerance; Statin-associated muscle symptoms; Statin-associated symptoms
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28466399 PMCID: PMC5427112 DOI: 10.1007/s10557-017-6727-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Drugs Ther ISSN: 0920-3206 Impact factor: 3.727
Number of specialists and GPs who completed the survey
| Country | Number of specialists (% of total) | Number of GPs (% of total) |
|---|---|---|
| Austria | 20 (33%) | 40 (67%) |
| Belgium | 33 (55%) | 27 (45%) |
| Colombia | 20 (33%) | 40 (67%) |
| Croatia | 15 (50%) | 15 (50%) |
| Czech Republic | 20 (33%) | 40 (67%) |
| Denmark | 23 (38%) | 37 (62%) |
| Portugal | 15 (25%) | 45 (75%) |
| Russia | 33 (55%) | 27 (45%) |
| Saudi Arabia | 40 (67%) | 20 (33%) |
| Switzerland | 28 (47%) | 32 (53%) |
| Turkey | 30 (50%) | 30 (50%) |
| United Arab Emirates | 33 (55%) | 27 (45%) |
GP general/family physician
Fig. 1Patients (%) presenting with potential SAS who have muscle-related symptoms
Fig. 2Clinicians (%) who rechallenge as a minimum requirement before considering muscle-related symptoms to be SAS
Fig. 3Clinicians (%) who try ≥2 alternative statins before considering muscle-related symptoms to be SAS
Fig. 4Estimated proportion of patients confirmed to have statin intolerance
Fig. 5Treatment strategies for patients who cannot tolerate statins at the recommended therapeutic dose
First choices of non-statin monotherapy for patients with confirmed SAS
| Country | Most common first-choice therapy (% of clinicians selecting as first choice) | |
|---|---|---|
| Specialists | GPs | |
| Austria | Ezetimibe (85%) | Ezetimibe (64%) |
| Belgium | Ezetimibe (85%) | Ezetimibe (63%) |
| Colombia | Ezetimibe (42%) | Ezetimibe (47%) |
| Croatia | Ezetimibe (62%) | Fibratesa (43%) |
| Czech Republic | Ezetimibe (80%) | Fibratesa (84%) |
| Denmark | Ezetimibe (91%) | Ezetimibe (91%) |
| Portugal | Ezetimibe (79%) | Ezetimibe (68%) |
| Russia | Ezetimibe (43%) | Ezetimibe (39%) |
| Saudi Arabia | Fibratesa (66%) | Fibratesa (53%) |
| Switzerland | Ezetimibe (89%) | Ezetimibe (81%) |
| Turkey | Ezetimibe (66%) | Fibratesa (66%) |
| UAE | Fibratesa (67%) | Fibratesa (56%) |
aClinicians selected from a list of therapies including fenofibrate, bezafibrate, ciprofibrate, and gemfibrozil; there were differences in the frequency of selection of individual fibrates between countries
GP general/family physician, UAE United Arab Emirates