AI Article Synopsis

  • Women are often underrecognized for cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk and lack representation in studies on lipid-lowering treatments, especially in those of childbearing age.
  • While lifestyle changes are crucial for CVD prevention, some women may still require medication for managing lipid levels, but safety concerns during pregnancy and lactation limit options.
  • There's a significant gap in sex-specific research regarding the effectiveness and safety of lipid-lowering therapies in women, highlighting the urgent need for increased female participation in clinical trials and more data on potential risks during pregnancy.

Article Abstract

Purpose Of Review: Women are less often recognized to have cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk and are underrepresented in randomized trials of lipid-lowering therapy. Here, we summarize non-pharmacologic and pharmacologic strategies for lipid-lowering in women of childbearing age, lipid changes during pregnancy and lactation, discuss sex-specific outcomes in currently available literature, and discuss future areas of research.

Recent Findings: While lifestyle interventions form the backbone of CVD prevention, some women of reproductive age have an indication for pharmacologic lipid-lowering. Sex-based evidence is limited but suggests that both statin and non-statin lipid-lowering agents are beneficial regardless of sex, especially at high cardiovascular risk. Pharmacologic lipid-lowering therapies, both during the pregnancy period and during lactation, have historically been and continue to be limited by safety concerns. This oftentimes limits lipid-lowering options in women of childbearing age. In this review, we summarize lipid-lowering strategies in women of childbearing age and the impact of therapies during pregnancy and lactation. The limited sex-specific data regarding efficacy, adverse events, and cardiovascular outcomes underscore the need for a greater representation of women in randomized controlled trials. More data on lipid-lowering teratogenicity are needed, and through increased clinician awareness and reporting to incidental exposure registries, more data can be harvested.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11886-022-01751-zDOI Listing

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