Achievement of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol goals in 18 countries outside Western Europe: the International ChoLesterol management Practice Study (ICLPS)

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Date
2018-05-17Authors
Danchin, NicolasAlmahmeed, Wael
Al Rasadi, Khalid
Azuri, Joseph
Berrah, Abdelkrim
Cuneo, Carlos Alberto
Karpov, Yuri
Kaul, Upendra
Kayıkçioğlu, Meral
Mitchenko, Olena
Ruiz, Álvaro J
Aguilar Salinas, Carlos A
Santos, Raul D
Mercier, Florence
Blom, Dirk
ICLPS Investigators
Corporate Author(s)
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana. Facultad de Medicina. Departamento de Epidemiología Clínica y Bioestadística
Type
Artículo de revista
ISSN
2047-4873 / 2047-4881 (Electrónico)
Pages
1087–1094
Item type
Artículo de investigación
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Abstract
Background: Little is known about the achievement of low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) targets in patients at cardiovascular risk receiving stable lipid-lowering therapy (LLT) in countries outside Western Europe. Methods: This cross-sectional observational study was conducted in 452 centres (August 2015August 2016) in 18countries in Eastern Europe, Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America. Patients (n¼9049) treated for 3 months with any LLT and in whom an LDL-C measurement on stable LLT was available within the previous 12 months were included. Results: The mean SD age was 60.211.7 years, 55.0% of patients were men and the mean SD LDL-C value on LLT was 2.61.3 mmol/L (101.049.2 mg/dL). At enrolment, 97.9% of patients were receiving a statin (25.3% on high intensity treatment). Only 32.1% of the very high risk patients versus 51.9% of the high risk and 55.7% of the moderate risk patients achieved their LDL-C goals. On multivariable analysis, factors independently associated with not achieving LDL-C goals were no (versus lower dose) statin therapy, a higher (versus lower) dose of statin, statin intolerance, overweight and obesity, female sex, neurocognitive disorders, level of cardiovascular risk, LDL-C value unknown at diagnosis, high blood pressure and current smoking. Diabetes was associated with a lower risk of not achieving LDL-C goals. Conclusions: These observational data suggest that the achievement of LDL-C goals is suboptimal in selected countries outside Western Europe. Efforts are needed to improve the management of patients using combination therapy and/or more intensive LLTs.
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https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2047487318777079Source
European Journal of Preventive Cardiology; Vol. 25 Núm. 10 (2018)
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