Abstract

AimsTo analyse the treatment and control of dyslipidaemia in patients at high and very high cardiovascular risk being treated for the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in Europe.Methods and ResultsData were assessed from the European Study on Cardiovascular Risk Prevention and Management in Usual Daily Practice (EURIKA, ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00882336), which included a randomly sampled population of primary CVD prevention patients from 12 European countries (n = 7641). Patients’ 10-year risk of CVD-related mortality was calculated using the Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation (SCORE) algorithm, identifying 5019 patients at high cardiovascular risk (SCORE ≥5% and/or receiving lipid-lowering therapy), and 2970 patients at very high cardiovascular risk (SCORE ≥10% or with diabetes mellitus). Among high-risk individuals, 65.3% were receiving lipid-lowering therapy, and 61.3% of treated patients had uncontrolled low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) levels (≥2.5 mmol/L). For very-high-risk patients (uncontrolled LDL-C levels defined as ≥1.8 mmol/L) these figures were 49.5% and 82.9%, respectively. Excess 10-year risk of CVD-related mortality (according to SCORE) attributable to lack of control of dyslipidaemia was estimated to be 0.72% and 1.61% among high-risk and very-high-risk patients, respectively. Among high-risk individuals with uncontrolled LDL-C levels, only 8.7% were receiving a high-intensity statin (atorvastatin ≥40 mg/day or rosuvastatin ≥20 mg/day). Among very-high-risk patients, this figure was 8.4%.ConclusionsThere is a considerable opportunity for improvement in rates of lipid-lowering therapy use and achievement of lipid-level targets in high-risk and very-high-risk patients being treated for primary CVD prevention in Europe.

Highlights

  • Elevated serum total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) levels are among the primary causal risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD) [1, 2, 3]

  • Writing support was provided by Oxford PharmaGenesis Ltd, Oxford, UK, and was funded by AstraZeneca

  • There is a considerable opportunity for improvement in rates of lipid-lowering therapy use and achievement of lipid-level targets in high-risk and very-high-risk patients being treated for primary CVD prevention in Europe

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Summary

Introduction

Elevated serum total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) levels are among the primary causal risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD) [1, 2, 3]. We have previously shown in the European Study on Cardiovascular Risk Prevention and Management in Usual Daily Practice (EURIKA; ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00882336) that dyslipidaemia remains prevalent in Europe, with a total of 57.7% of patients with at least one major risk factor for CVD but no history of cardiovascular events (a primary CVD prevention population) being dyslipidaemic [4]. Patients are considered to be at high cardiovascular risk if they have a SCORE of 5 to

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