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Impact of the new American and British guidelines on the management and treatment of dyslipidemia in a Spanish working population. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The American and British guidelines on dyslipidemia promote removing treatment targets and using new risk assessment tables, prompting this study to evaluate their impact compared to European guidelines.
  • An observational study involving 258,676 Spanish workers found that cardiovascular risk assessments differed significantly, with higher risk percentages identified using American and British tables compared to European ones.
  • Adopting the American guidelines would lead to a substantial increase in patients requiring treatment and significantly higher costs for statin medications, compared to adherence to European recommendations.

Article Abstract

Introduction And Objectives: The guidelines of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association and the British National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence on the management and treatment of dyslipidemia recommend significant changes, such as the abolition of therapeutic targets and the use of new risk tables. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of the use of these new guidelines compared with the application of European guidelines.

Methods: Observational study conducted among Spanish workers. We included all workers registered with the Sociedad de Prevención de Ibermutuamur in 2011 whose cardiovascular risk could be evaluated. Cardiovascular risk was calculated for each worker using the Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation cardiovascular risk tables for low-risk countries, as well as the tables recommended by the American and British guidelines.

Results: A total of 258,676 workers were included (68.2% men; mean age, 39.3 years). High risk was found in 3.74% of the population according to the Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation tables and in 6.85% and 20.83% according to the British and American tables, respectively. Treatment would be needed in 20 558 workers according to the American guidelines and in 13,222 according to the British guidelines, but in only 2612 according to the European guidelines. By following the American guidelines, the cost of statins would increase by a factor of 8.

Conclusions: The new recommendations would result in identifying more high-risk patients and in treating a larger fraction of the population with lipid-lowering drugs than with the European recommendations, which would result in increased costs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rec.2014.06.018DOI Listing

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