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Statins Could Prevent More Strokes, Heart Attacks: Analysis
Monday, September 27, 2010
By: Business Week
Business Week
Broader use of cholesterol-lowering statins may be a cost-effective way to
prevent heart attack and stroke, U.S. researchers suggest.
In the study, published online Sept. 27 in the journal
Circulation, the researchers also found that screening for high sensitivity
C-reactive protein (CRP) to identify patients who may benefit from statin
therapy is only cost-effective in certain cases. Elevated levels of CRP
indicate inflammation and suggest an increased risk for heart attack and
stroke.
Currently, statin therapy is recommended for high-risk
patients -- those with a 20 percent or greater risk of some type of
cardiovascular event within the next 10 years. But statins may also benefit
people with a lower risk, according to Dr. Mark Hlatky, professor of health
research and policy and of cardiovascular medicine at Stanford University
School of Medicine in Stanford, Calif., and colleagues.
Hlatky's team set out to determine the cost-effectiveness of
three statin therapy approaches in patients with normal cholesterol levels and
no evidence of heart disease or diabetes: following current guidelines;
conducting CRP screening in patients who don't meet current statin treatment
guidelines and offering statins to those with elevated CRP levels; and
providing statin therapy based on a patient's cardiovascular risk alone, with
no CRP testing.
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