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Treatment gaps and potential cardiovascular risk reduction from expanded statin use in the US and England

BACKGROUND: The updated national guidelines for cardiovascular risk assessment and lipid modification in the UK and US expand the indications for statin therapy in primary prevention to adults with moderate risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) but many adults at high CVD risk remain untreated in bot...

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Autores principales: Ueda, Peter, Lung, Thomas Wai-Chun, Lu, Yuan, Salomon, Joshua A., Rahimi, Kazem, Clarke, Philip, Danaei, Goodarz
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5862405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29561843
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0190688
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author Ueda, Peter
Lung, Thomas Wai-Chun
Lu, Yuan
Salomon, Joshua A.
Rahimi, Kazem
Clarke, Philip
Danaei, Goodarz
author_facet Ueda, Peter
Lung, Thomas Wai-Chun
Lu, Yuan
Salomon, Joshua A.
Rahimi, Kazem
Clarke, Philip
Danaei, Goodarz
author_sort Ueda, Peter
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The updated national guidelines for cardiovascular risk assessment and lipid modification in the UK and US expand the indications for statin therapy in primary prevention to adults with moderate risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) but many adults at high CVD risk remain untreated in both countries. We set out to identify treatment gaps in English and American adults at moderate and high risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), and to estimate the number of CVD events that would be prevented from expanding statin therapy to those who are currently untreated. METHODS: We used nationally representative samples of 10,375 English adults and 7,687 US adults aged 40–75 years and free of existing CVD from the Health Survey for England 2009–2013, and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2007–2012 in the US. We used the risk algorithms and the risk thresholds for statin therapy recommended by each country’s national guideline to categorize the survey participants into moderate-risk (≥10% to <20% 10-year risk of CVD in England and ≥7.5% to <20% risk in the US) or high-risk (≥20%risk) and simulated the number of events that would be prevented from expansion of statin therapy to those currently untreated. RESULTS: Close to half of adults at high CVD risk in England (46.0%) and the US (49.7%) were not receiving statins. Expanding statin use to 1.45 million high-risk adults in England would save 101,000 (95% CI = 81,000–120,000) CVD events in the next 10 years compared with 128,000 (103,000–154,000) CVD events that would be prevented from expanding treatment to 3.64 million untreated moderate-risk adults. In the US, expanding statin use to 5.27 million untreated high-risk adults would save 384,000 (305,000–461,000) CVD events over 10 years compared with 616,000 (493,000–738,000) CVD events that would be prevented from treating 20.29 million untreated moderate-risk adults. CONCLUSIONS: In both England and the US, expanding statin therapy to untreated moderate-risk adults would prevent a comparable number of events as expanding statin use to a much smaller number of currently untreated high-risk adults. A large potential for CVD prevention remains from improving coverage of statin therapy among high-risk adults.
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spelling pubmed-58624052018-03-28 Treatment gaps and potential cardiovascular risk reduction from expanded statin use in the US and England Ueda, Peter Lung, Thomas Wai-Chun Lu, Yuan Salomon, Joshua A. Rahimi, Kazem Clarke, Philip Danaei, Goodarz PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The updated national guidelines for cardiovascular risk assessment and lipid modification in the UK and US expand the indications for statin therapy in primary prevention to adults with moderate risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) but many adults at high CVD risk remain untreated in both countries. We set out to identify treatment gaps in English and American adults at moderate and high risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), and to estimate the number of CVD events that would be prevented from expanding statin therapy to those who are currently untreated. METHODS: We used nationally representative samples of 10,375 English adults and 7,687 US adults aged 40–75 years and free of existing CVD from the Health Survey for England 2009–2013, and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2007–2012 in the US. We used the risk algorithms and the risk thresholds for statin therapy recommended by each country’s national guideline to categorize the survey participants into moderate-risk (≥10% to <20% 10-year risk of CVD in England and ≥7.5% to <20% risk in the US) or high-risk (≥20%risk) and simulated the number of events that would be prevented from expansion of statin therapy to those currently untreated. RESULTS: Close to half of adults at high CVD risk in England (46.0%) and the US (49.7%) were not receiving statins. Expanding statin use to 1.45 million high-risk adults in England would save 101,000 (95% CI = 81,000–120,000) CVD events in the next 10 years compared with 128,000 (103,000–154,000) CVD events that would be prevented from expanding treatment to 3.64 million untreated moderate-risk adults. In the US, expanding statin use to 5.27 million untreated high-risk adults would save 384,000 (305,000–461,000) CVD events over 10 years compared with 616,000 (493,000–738,000) CVD events that would be prevented from treating 20.29 million untreated moderate-risk adults. CONCLUSIONS: In both England and the US, expanding statin therapy to untreated moderate-risk adults would prevent a comparable number of events as expanding statin use to a much smaller number of currently untreated high-risk adults. A large potential for CVD prevention remains from improving coverage of statin therapy among high-risk adults. Public Library of Science 2018-03-21 /pmc/articles/PMC5862405/ /pubmed/29561843 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0190688 Text en © 2018 Ueda et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ueda, Peter
Lung, Thomas Wai-Chun
Lu, Yuan
Salomon, Joshua A.
Rahimi, Kazem
Clarke, Philip
Danaei, Goodarz
Treatment gaps and potential cardiovascular risk reduction from expanded statin use in the US and England
title Treatment gaps and potential cardiovascular risk reduction from expanded statin use in the US and England
title_full Treatment gaps and potential cardiovascular risk reduction from expanded statin use in the US and England
title_fullStr Treatment gaps and potential cardiovascular risk reduction from expanded statin use in the US and England
title_full_unstemmed Treatment gaps and potential cardiovascular risk reduction from expanded statin use in the US and England
title_short Treatment gaps and potential cardiovascular risk reduction from expanded statin use in the US and England
title_sort treatment gaps and potential cardiovascular risk reduction from expanded statin use in the us and england
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5862405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29561843
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0190688
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