Article

Statin Therapy May Not Benefit All Patients with Heart Disease

Patients treated with statins who had high levels of LDL-C had an increased risk of cardiovascular events.

Only certain patients with stable ischemic heart disease (IHD) benefit from statins, while others do not, a recent study found.

Since patients with IHD have an increased risk of cardiovascular events, long-term treatment with cholesterol-lowering statins are recommended, according to the study published in JAMA Internal Medicine. The European Society of Cardiology recommends that statin treatments achieve a low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) level of below 70-mg/dl for patients.

Researchers in the study used LDL-C levels to compare the risk of major cardiac adverse events (MACE) for patients with IHD who have been receiving statins for at least 1 year. Low levels of LDL-C were considered to be less than or equal to 70-mg/dL; moderate levels were considered to be 70.1 to 100-mg/dL; high levels were considered to be 100.1 to 130-mg/dL, according to the study.

There were 31,619 patients included who adhered to their statin therapy at least 80% of the time. Approximately 29% of patients had low LDL-C levels, 53% had moderate levels, and 18% had high LDL-C levels, the researchers wrote.

Researchers found that patients with a low LDL-C level did not have a strong associated risk of MACE compared with patients who had a moderate level. They did find that patients who had moderate LDL-C levels were associated with a lower risk of MACE compared with patients who had high levels, according to the study.

"Our results do not provide support for a blanket principle that lower LDL-C is better for all patients in secondary prevention," the researchers concluded.

Newsletter

Stay informed on drug updates, treatment guidelines, and pharmacy practice trends—subscribe to Pharmacy Times for weekly clinical insights.

Related Videos
Image credit: Sebastian Kaulitzki | stock.adobe.com
1 expert is featured in this series.
Magnified bone marrow biopsy showing plasma cells with irregular nuclei and multiple myeloma tumor cells infiltrating normal hematopoietic tissue
Health and nutrition: the role of glp-1 in diabetes management with apple and syringe - Image credit: Thanayut | stock.adobe.com
5 experts in this video
5 experts in this video