Abstract
Abstract Background The proportion of Australian general practice patients not attaining low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) goals is not well described. The SCOPE-GP study evaluated duration of LDL-C exceeding treatment goals, statin use and discontinuation rates in patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD), without ASCVD events but at moderate/high-risk, and familial hypercholesterolemia (FH). Methods This population-based retrospective cohort study used de-identified medical records of adult patients captured in the IQVIA GP-EMR database. Patients were indexed at the earliest date of ASCVD, FH, or hyperlipidemia diagnosis from January 1, 2010 to June 30, 2022, with a variable follow-up period from index to June 30, 2022. Ascertainment of study cohort was based on the 2021 ESC/EAS guidelines and Framingham Risk Equation. LDL-C test result levels were extracted per patient, summarised and analysed. Patients were stratified based on their test results at latest results/closest to censor date. Average time above target levels is the proportion of number of days above LDL-C target levels over total number of follow-up days for each patient. A Poisson distribution was fitted to estimate 95% confidence interval. Lipid lowering therapies (LLT) were stratified by (ASCVD, FH and moderate/high risk of CVD) at last visit/censor date. Combination of LLT were defined as prescriptions for fixed dose combinations or ≥2 separate scripts of LLT from different classes within 180 days from last visit/censor date (look back period). Discontinuation is defined as no statins were prescribed again after the last script for 270 days or more, limited to the first occurrence. Results The average time with LDL-C levels above target was 1077.5 days in ASCVD patients (n=2,688), 938.6 days in moderate-risk ASCVD (n=37,003), 980.9 days in high-risk ASCVD (n=85,199), and 900.8 days in FH (n=279). The proportion of days above target level for all four cohorts is described in Figure 1. Among 107,552 patients with recorded LDL-C levels ≥1.8mmol/L at their last visit/censor date, 30.9% were on statin monotherapy and 1.0% were on statin+ezetimibe. Statin use was highest in ASCVD patients (65.4%), followed by FH (49.5%), high risk (40.0%) and moderate risk subjects (29.5%) (Table 1). Statin discontinuation rates were 60.3%, 76.3, 66.1%, and 65.8% in these groups, respectively. The predominant reason for statin discontinuation was non-specific adverse drug reactions (12.2% ASCVD, 11.7% moderate-risk, 13.2% high-risk and 17.9% FH). The proportion of subjects contraindicated to statins was highest in moderate risk subjects (0.05%). Conclusions Prolonged periods of elevated LDL-C and high statin discontinuation rates were prevalent among at-risk individuals in Australian primary care. This underscores a significant ASCVD burden that could be prevented with more active lipid management.
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