AI Article Synopsis

  • Many patients with coronary artery disease struggle to reach recommended LDL cholesterol levels, but cardiac rehabilitation (CR) programs can help improve adherence to treatments.
  • A study tracked 1,015 patients at different stages of their medical care and found that LDL levels improved from 57% to 63% below 70 mg/dL after 3 months in the CR program, despite high doses of statins being widely prescribed.
  • The findings highlight a treatment gap where many patients still do not meet lipid goals, suggesting a need for stronger lipid-lowering therapies and better adherence to treatment regimens.

Article Abstract

Background: A significant number of coronary artery disease patients do not attain guideline recommended LDL levels. Participating in a cardiac rehabilitation (CR) program has been shown to improve adherence to medical therapy.

Objectives: Evaluate the specific lipid lowering therapy (LLT) prescribed and percent of subjects achieving LDL levels of <70 mg/dL before and after 3 months following CR program initiation.

Methods: From May 2017 to April 2019, we prospectively recruited patients referred to our CR program and compared 1015 of them at 4 time points; (P1) just prior to the index hospitalization, (P2) during the index hospitalization, (P3) upon entering the CR program, roughly 3 months after the index hospitalization, and (P4) 3 months into the CR program. Included in the analysis were parameters of lipid levels, the dispensed medication given, as well as patient adherence to treatment. : At CR intake, LDL goals were partially achieved with 57% of patients below 70 mg/dL. After completion of 3 months of CR, 63% of patients had LDL levels below 70 mg/dL, despite the fact that the majority (95%) were prescribed high-dose potent statins. Aside from the LDL levels at CR intake, we found no other independent predictors for not attaining the lipid goals at 6 months.

Conclusions: A significant treatment gap is present even in a selected population participating in CR, with the vast majority receiving guideline recommended LLT. In order to improve goals, we need to intensify LLT treatment, and increase patient adherence to therapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9428802PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcrp.2022.200145DOI Listing

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