Abstract

348 Background: Prostate cancer (PCa) patients treated with androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) may experience major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE). It is unclear how much of MACE is caused by ADT itself. High cholesterol has been associated with lower MACE risk in older men, not on statin therapy. This study evaluates MACE risk after ADT initiation for patients with and without hypercholesterolemia using real-world data. Methods: US electronic medical records (2010-2020) of PCa patients (n=45,059) receiving LHRH agonist/antagonist injections were analyzed to calculate the risk of MACE since ADT initiation in patients with and without hypercholesterolemia. Hypercholesterolemia was defined as having taken hypercholesterolemia medication or diagnosis with hypercholesterolemia prior to the first MACE event after ADT start. Exclusion criteria included lack of ADT initiation date or MACE within six months prior to ADT initiation. MACE was defined as myocardial infarction, stroke, and death from any cause. Kaplan-Meier event-free survival curves and cox regression were used to compare MACE risk between patients with and without hypercholesterolemia. Results: The dataset contained 178,388 LHRH injection entries and 7,681 MACE. MACE risk was only 1.8% lower (19.0% vs 20.8%) after 4 years for patients with hypercholesterolemia compared to those without (across 10 years, unadjusted: HR=0.88, 95% CI [0.83, 0.92] and adjusted: HR=0.85, 95% CI [0.77, 0.94]). Conclusions: Patients with hypercholesterolemia appear to have slightly lower MACE rates. This may be due to the use of statins, which can reduce the incidence of CV events in a general population. Our analysis of data over the most recent decade from ~45,000 PCa patients is likely an accurate reflection of the real world. Clinicians should monitor PCa patients with underlying CV risk factors and help educate them on lifestyle changes that could impact treatment outcomes.

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