| Literature DB >> 36012589 |
Enrica Rossini1, Federico Biscetti2, Maria Margherita Rando2, Elisabetta Nardella2, Andrea Leonardo Cecchini1, Maria Anna Nicolazzi2, Marcello Covino1,3, Antonio Gasbarrini1,4, Massimo Massetti1,5, Andrea Flex1,2.
Abstract
Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) morbidity and mortality are decreasing in high-income countries, but ASCVD remains the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in high-income countries. Over the past few decades, major risk factors for ASCVD, including LDL cholesterol (LDL-C), have been identified. Statins are the drug of choice for patients at increased risk of ASCVD and remain one of the most commonly used and effective drugs for reducing LDL cholesterol and the risk of mortality and coronary artery disease in high-risk groups. Unfortunately, doctors tend to under-prescribe or under-dose these drugs, mostly out of fear of side effects. The latest guidelines emphasize that treatment intensity should increase with increasing cardiovascular risk and that the decision to initiate intervention remains a matter of individual consideration and shared decision-making. The purpose of this review was to analyze the indications for initiation or continuation of statin therapy in different categories of patient with high cardiovascular risk, considering their complexity and comorbidities in order to personalize treatment.Entities:
Keywords: LDL-cholesterol; atherosclerosis; cardiovascular disease; statin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36012589 PMCID: PMC9409457 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23169326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1How to decide which statin and what dosage.
Figure 2Hydrophilic and lipophilic statins.
Figure 3Intensity of statin therapy [12].
LDL-C target according to cardiovascular risk.
| RISK CATEGORY. | WHICH PATIENT? | LDL-C TARGET |
|---|---|---|
| Very high-risk patients (10-year risk of cardiovascular mortality > 10%) | Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) documented clinically or by imaging (acute coronary syndrome, stable angina, coronary revascularization, stroke or transient ischemic attack, peripheral arterial disease). | LDL < 55 mg/dL or reduce LDL by at least 50% compared to baseline levels |
| Very very high-risk patients | Very high-risk patients who experience a second vascular event within 2 years of the first during therapy with statins at the highest tolerable dosage. | LDL < 40 mg/dL |
| High-risk patients (10-year risk of cardiovascular mortality 5–10%) | Particularly high individual risk factors, such as total cholesterol > 310 mg/dL (>8 mmol/L), LDL-C > 190 mg/dL (>4.9 mmol/L) or blood pressure ≥ 180/110 mmHg. | LDL < 70 mg/dL or reduce LDL values by at least 50% compared to the initial ones |
| Moderate risk patients (10-year risk of cardiovascular mortality > 1% <5%) | Diabetes in young subjects (T1DM < 35 years, T2DM < 50 years), present for less than 10 years and in absence of other risk factors | LDL < 100 mg/dL |
| Low-risk patients (risk of cardiovascular mortality at 10 years < 1%) | LDL < 116 mg/dL |
Indications for initiation or continuation of statin therapy in different categories of high cardiovascular risk patients.
| CATEGORY | INDICATION |
|---|---|
| ACS | Early initiation or continuation of high-dose statin therapy is recommended |
| PAD | Start or continue statin therapy according to the ESC guideline |
| HF | Statins should be continued in HFrEF patients already receiving statins for coronary artery disease or hyperlipidemia. Initiation of statins is not recommended for most patients with chronic heart failure |
| CARDIAC VALVULOPATHIES | It is not recommended to initiate statins to slow progression of aortic stenosis in patients with non-CAD aortic stenosis without other indications for use |
| STROKE | Statins are recommended for patients with a history of ischemic stroke or TIA |
| ELDERLY PEOPLE | Starting statin therapy for primary prevention at very high cardiovascular risk may be considered, subject to other factors such as risk modifiers, frailty, estimated benefit over the life course, comorbidities and patient preferences. Statin therapy is generally safe and well-tolerated in these patients, and ongoing treatment should be continued |
| YOUNG PEOPLE | Starting statin therapy for primary prevention of ASCVD in individuals ≥ 21 years of age with LDL-C ≥ 190 mg/dL is recommended. For individuals 20 to 39 years of age with LDL-C < 190 mg/dL, a lifetime risk assessment is recommended |
| FAMILIAL DYSLIPIDEMIAS | Children homozygous for FH should be treated as early as possible at the time of diagnosis. Children heterozygous for FH should be initiated at the lowest recommended dose and up-titrated according to the LDL cholesterol-lowering response and tolerability from 8 to 10 years of age |
| GENDER | If patients at high cardiovascular risk develop cognitive impairment due to statin use and require continued lipid-lowering therapy, the use of less lipophilic statins should be considered |
| PREGNANCY | Statins should be avoided during pregnancy and discontinued prior to conception due to limited data and information quality |
| PERIOPERATIVE PERIOD | It is recommended that patients on statins as maintenance therapy continue to use statins in the perioperative period. Statins are indicated for patients with vascular surgery with or without clinical risk factors and should be considered for moderate-risk surgery in patients with at least one clinical risk factor |
| CHRONIC RENAL FAILURE | Guidelines recommend statins for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease in patients over 50 years of age with eGFR < 60 mL/min/1.73 m2. In adults < 50 years with chronic kidney disease, known coronary artery disease, diabetes, previous ischemic stroke, or estimated cardiovascular risk > 10% at 10 years of age, statin therapy should be initiated. Initiation of statin therapy in chronic dialysis patients is not recommended. It should be considered continuing therapy in patients starting dialysis, especially those with ASCVD |
| MUSCLE DISEASE | Guidelines recommend against starting statin therapy if baseline CK > 4 ULN |
| HIV | There are no guidelines on statin therapy developed specifically for the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease among HIV-infected patients, but preliminary observational data suggest a potential CVD morbidity and all-cause mortality benefit in routine care |
| LIVER DISEASE | Statins should be used in these patients if they have a metabolic or cardiovascular indication. In patients with compensated cirrhosis, statins are safe and can be used at conventional dosages. Simvastatin 20 mg and pravastatin 40 mg could be the choice in decompensated patients when there is an indication for statins. Patients with Child–Pugh C have a short-term high liver mortality, which is unlikely to be changed by statins |
| DIABETES | Statin is the primary target of lipid-lowering therapy in patients with DM2. In light of the well-established cardiovascular risk-reducing effect of statin use, the consensus of experts is that statin therapy should not be discontinued for fear of increasing the risk of diabetes |
| CANCER | Survival is not affected when statins prescribed for primary or secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease are discontinued in this population |
| TRANSPLANTED PATIENTS | Statins should be considered as first-line agents in transplant patients, and initiation should be at low doses with careful up-titration and with caution because of potential drug interactions |