Introduction: There are very few studies evaluating lipid-lowering treatments (LLTs) and low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (LDL-C) goal attainment after the release of the 2019 guidelines of the European Societies of Cardiology (ESC) and Atherosclerosis (EAS). This manuscript shows baseline data of the Spanish subset from SANTORINI study (namely SANTORINI Spain) on LDL-C goal attainment and use of LLTs in patients at high and very high cardiovascular risk.
Methods: SANTORINI was a multinational, prospective, observational study involving patients at high and very high cardiovascular risk from 14 European countries in primary care and specialized healthcare settings. Sociodemographic data, blood lipid levels, and lipid treatments from the 1018 Spanish participants, were separately analyzed and were put into perspective with the European cohort without Spanish participants.
Results: According to physicians, 295 (29.0%) subjects were classified as high, and 723 (71.0%) as very high cardiovascular risk. Overall, 26.5% attained risk-based LDL-C targets recommended by 2019 European guidelines, with 23.1% of patients at high cardiovascular risk and 27.9% at very high cardiovascular risk. High-intensity statin therapy in monotherapy was used in 21.8%, LLT combination therapy in 41.2%, and 10.7% were not receiving any LLT.
Conclusions: Baseline data from SANTORINI Spain population show that only about one-fourth of patients attain LDL-C targets recommended by the 2019 ESC/EAS guidelines in patients at high and very high risk. Despite their cardiovascular risk, patients appear to be not adequately treated, and high-intensity and combination LLT seem to be underused for cardiovascular disease prevention in the real-world setting.
Clinicaltrials: gov Identifier: NCT04271280.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rceng.2024.11.004 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!