Abstract

BackgroundRecommendations have not yet been established for statin therapy in patients on maintenance dialysis. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the effects of statin therapy on all‐cause mortality in patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis.Methods and ResultsThis retrospective cohort study analyzed data from adults, aged ≥30 years, who were on maintenance hemodialysis for end‐stage renal disease. Data on statin use, along with other clinical information between 2007 and 2017, were extracted from the Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service database in Korea. In total, 65 404 patients were included, and 41 549 (73.2%) patients had received statin therapy for a mean duration of 3.6±2.6 years. Compared with statin nonusers before and after the initiation of hemodialysis (entry), patients who initiated statin therapy after entry and patients who continued statins from the pre–end‐stage renal disease to post–end‐stage renal disease period had a lower risk of all‐cause mortality; the adjusted hazard ratios (95% CIs) were 0.48 (0.47–0.50; P<0.001) for post–end‐stage renal disease only statin users and 0.59 (0.57–0.60; P<0.001) for continuous statin users. However, those discontinuing statins before or at entry showed a higher risk of all‐cause mortality. Statin‐ezetimibe combinations were associated with better survival benefits than fixed patterns of statin therapy. These results were consistent across various subgroups, including elderly patients aged >75 years, and were maintained even after propensity score matching.ConclusionsOur results showed that in adult patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis, statin therapy, preferably combined with ezetimibe, was associated with a lower risk of all‐cause mortality.

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