The Borneo Post

Half of statins patients don’t hit ‘healthy’ cholestero­l levels

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PARIS: Millions of patients around the world taking statins to lower the risk of heart disease fail to achieve the recommende­d levels of cholestero­l reduction after two years of treatment, new research said Monday.

Statins — a class of medicines designed to reduce cholestero­l linked to heart disease and strokes — are among the most commonly prescribed drugs in the US and Britain.

The cholestero­l-lowering industry is worth billions of dollars, but guidelines over who should take statins are often unclear.

A team of researcher­s in Britain reviewed public health records of 165,000 patients taking the medicine and found that fewer than one in two reached the recommende­d ‘healthy’ 40 per cent cholestero­l reduction within two years.

“Statins do work and are effective, but some trials have highlighte­d there have been variations in responses among some patients,” said Ralph Kwame Akyea, research associate at the University of Nottingham’s Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences.

“But we’ve shown there are some people not reaching this (safe cholestero­l level) and the reducing of their risk is lower,” he told AFP.

Akyea’s study, published in the journal Heart, found that people on average started taking statins aged 62.

It found nearly 23,000 cases of cardiovasc­ular disease within six years of statin treatment among patients.

In total, 51 per cent of patients had an insufficie­nt drop in cholestero­l even while taking the drugs.

Akyea stressed that the study — the largest of its kind to date — could not establish why some patients responded positively to statins while others didn’t.

“Probably some people would have stopped taking their medication, maybe they had side effects,” he said.

“There might also be a role played by genetic variation. Not everyone responds to the medication and there are currently studies looking at the genetics of drug response.”

Akyea and his team suggested that better guidance and monitoring was needed to ensure those given statins were taking the correct doses for the prescribed amount of time. — AFP

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