Abstract

Aim To evaluate the frequency and structure of lipid-lowering therapy and of achieving the goal of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) in patients with very high cardiovascular risk (CVR) who were monitored at the outpatient stage.Material and methods A retrospective snapshot analysis was performed by continuous sampling method for 136 medical records of outpatient patients (71 men, 65 women) aged 42 to 91 years [median, 68 years; 25th and 75th percentiles (59; 78)].Results 134 (98,53 %) patients took statins; 8 (5.88 %) patients took a combination of statin and ezetimibe; 2 (1.47 %) patients took proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 enzyme inhibitors (PCSK9): 2 (1.47 %) patients took evolocumab and 1 (0.74%) of 2 PCSK9-treated patients took a combination of PCSK9 inhibitor and statin. Atorvastatin at a dose of 20 (20; 40) mg as recommended at the hospital was the most frequently prescribed statin. 5 (3.68%) patients achieved the goal LDL-C of ≤1.4 mmol/l.Conclusion Statins prevail in the structure of lipid-lowering therapy in patients with very high CVR. The frequency of combination therapy (statin/ezetimibe, 5.88%; PCSK9 inhibitor/statin, 0.74%) and PCSK9 inhibitors was noted to be low. Only 3.68% of patients achieved the goal LDL-C during the lipid-lowering treatment.

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