Connecticut Post

Statins reduce the risk of heart attack

- Keith Roach, M.D.

Dear Dr. Roach: I am an 86-year-old man with Type 2 diabetes that has been treated using oral medication. I am 5 feet, 10 inches tall and weigh 160 pounds. I exercise regularly. My total cholestero­l has always been low (under 125). Recently it was 103 — with HDL 41 (it also has always been low), LDL 38, triglyceri­des 112 and total/HDL ratio of 2.4. I have high blood pressure under control on lisinopril and HCTZ. My physician has suggested using a statin to raise the HDL.

S. J.Z.

Answer: Statin drugs reduce the risk of having a first heart attack in people at moderate to high risk for heart disease. I think of statins not just as drugs that lower cholestero­l or raise HDL (although they do), but also as drugs that reduce heart risk when used appropriat­ely. This includes not only people with very high total or LDL cholestero­l levels, but also those with low HDL cholestero­l levels. It also includes people who, because of other reasons, have a high risk for developing heart disease within the next 10 years. The exact number varies, but most experts recommend statin drugs to those with 10-year risk that’s over 10 percent.

Your age alone puts you at high risk for heart disease. The diabetes, even if well-controlled, adds additional risk. None of the calculator­s available can calculate your risk, because your total cholestero­l is so low, but when I put in the lowest LDL the calculator accepts, the calculator estimates your risk of developing heart disease in the next 10 years at about 50 percent. That could be reduced with treatment, and my best estimate is that your risk on medication might be around 40 percent.

On the one hand, a statin is likely to decrease your risk of a heart attack. On the other hand, you have gone 86 years without developing heart disease. Further, serious side effects, although still not common, are more common in older people. There is no answer that all experts would agree on, and it is left to the judgment of you and your doctor.

Since it seems you are generally doing well and keeping active, I would be more inclined to support a decision to try the medication.

Readers may email questions to: ToYourGood­Health@med .cornell.edu or mail questions to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

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