
Low HDL and High Triglycerides are the Major Cardiovascular Risk FactorByron's Comments:While I agree with their findings I don't agree with their desire to increase the use of drugs to lower triglycerides. Study Title:New Insights Link Low HDL-Cholesterol and Elevated Triglycerides with Coronary Heart Disease and Microvascular Complications in Patients at Goal for LDL-Cholesterol.Study Abstract:From press release: Low levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) and raised triglycerides, affecting millions of patients worldwide, are strongly linked to significantly increased risk of coronary heart disease (CHD) even in patients who achieve or surpass current low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) targets. This has been demonstrated in new analyses of the landmark Prospective Cardiovascular Münster (PROCAM) and the REsiduAl risk Lipids and Standard Therapies (REALIST) surveys, the latter funded and conducted by the Residual Risk Reduction Initiative Foundation or R³i. These data have been presented today at the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) congress. The final objective of the R³i is to significantly reduce the incidence of both major macrovascular events and microvascular complications (e.g. in patients with type 2 diabetes or affected by the metabolic syndrome) beyond what is already achieved with current treatments.1,2 Earlier studies, largely conducted in patients treated with statins show that lowering LDL-C to currently recognized goals only reduces the relative risk of macrovascular disease by about 23 percent.3 “The residual vascular risk driven by the increasing epidemic of obesity, metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes is not being adequately treated by clinicians,” stated Professor Frank Sacks from Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA and Vice-president of R³i. “While LDL-C is appropriately the current target, we have taken LDL-C reduction to its therapeutic limits without abolishing CVD events. Therefore we urgently need new strategies to address other modifiable risk factors such as atherogenic dyslipidemia.” New insights into lipid-related macrovascular risk •Low HDL-C and/or elevated triglycerides (TG) was seen in nearly two-thirds of MI patients 150 mg/dL) •High TG and low HDL-C are strong indicators of residual risk of CHD •Low HDL-C, elevated TG and elevated non-HDL-C levels are more prevalent in patients who developed microvascular complications “Further analysis of microvascular data from this and other centers should confirm the relationship between atherogenic dyslipidemia and microvascular complications of type 2 diabetes,” said Professor Fioretto. Implications of the R³i research program for future treatment The ultimate objective of the R³i Foundation is to identify new indicators of macro- and microvascular residual risk as targets for future treatment strategies. Residual vascular risk – A public health emergency Therefore, while statins are effective, other treatment strategies are urgently needed to address the residual vascular risk which persists in patients despite current standards of care. While the R³i research program will help define appropriate targets for intervention in patients who remain at high residual vascular risk, the ongoing outcomes trials such as ACCORD, AIM-HIGH and HPS2-THRIVE will help determine new treatment strategies to address this risk. “The R³i has a huge task ahead to get people recognizing the threat of residual vascular risk and acting to better manage it,” said Professor Jean-Charles Fruchart of the University of Lille, France and President of the R³i. “We have to look beyond using statins as a silver bullet to reduce LDL-cholesterol. The mindset that reducing one component to prevent heart disease is wrong and needs to change.” Epidemiological study methods The macrovascular REALIST survey was designed to determine, in patients at goal for LDL-C (≤ 130 mg/dL whether treated or untreated for elevated LDL-C) with a first or subsequent coronary event, whether low HDL-C and/or elevated TG levels are associated with a significant risk of coronary event after adjustment for other risk factors. Adult male or female patients admitted to coronary care units (CCUs) or explored in cardiac catheter laboratories were matched with controls hospitalized for other reasons. The microvascular REALIST survey was designed to determine whether low HDL-C and/or elevated TG levels are associated with a significant residual risk of microvascular complications. Data will be adjusted for other risk factors such as age, gender, diabetes duration, HbA1C, LDL-C levels, blood pressure, BMI and smoking status in patients with type 2 diabetes nearly at goal for LDL-C and presenting with incident microvascular complication (retinopathy, maculopathy or nephropathy). Diabetic neuropathy is an exploratory disease due to difficulties in establishing it with certainty in retrospective analysis. The REALIST surveys are currently being conducted in Belgium, Croatia, France, Italy, Japan, Philippines, Poland, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Thailand, Turkey and the U.S. What is residual vascular risk? Although statin therapy is the cornerstone of dyslipidemia management, LDL-C lowering with statins reduces the risk of major coronary events by approximately one-quarter, with 77 percent of the relative risk of events still occurring.3 Multifactorial intensive therapy (including statins) is insufficient to prevent the development or progression of microvascular disease (retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy) in up to 50 percent of patients with type 2 diabetes.4 Atherogenic Dyslipidemia and Residual Vascular Risk In the past three decades in the U.S., while the prevalence of abnormal levels of LDL-C has decreased, the prevalence of combined abnormal TG (≥150 mg/dL) and HDL-C ( <40 mg/dL) has doubled and the prevalence of elevated TG (≥150 mg/dL) has increased five-fold.5 Elevated TG (>150 mg/dL) is also common, affecting about 50 percent of adults with prior CVD.6 Atherogenic dyslipidemia contributes to the increased risk of macrovascular events such as myocardial infarction and stroke, and may be implicated in microvascular complications such as diabetic eye, kidney and lower limb disease.7 •Among patients achieving LDL-C <70 mg/dL with a statin, CVD risk is almost 60 percent greater for patients with TG >200 mg/dL8 R³i board of trustees Professor Frank Sacks, Vice-President Professor Michel P. Hermans, General Secretary
Study Information: New Insights Link Low HDL-Cholesterol and Elevated Triglycerides with Coronary Heart Disease and Microvascular Complications in Patients at Goal for LDL-Cholesterol. 2009 September Full Study:http://www.r3i.org |
