Abstract Lipid-lowering therapy (LLT) is key to reducing the burden of macrovascular diabetes complications. Here, we aim to assess long-term trends in LLT and LDL-C levels among patients with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) with angiographically proven coronary artery disease (CAD). We investigated T2DM patients (n=590), who were referred to elective coronary angiography and were diagnosed with CAD in one of three observational cohort studies (OS) spanning 25 years: OS1: 1999-2000 (n=190); OS2: 2005-2008 (n=241); OS3: 2022-2023 (n=159). These studies were conducted at the same cardiology unit of a tertiary care hospital in Central Europe. The proportion of patients receiving statin therapy (C10AA and C10AB) increased significantly from 57.9% in OS1 to 64.3% in OS2 and 78.6% in OS3 (ptrend<0.001). Further, there was an increase in patients receiving high-intensity statin therapy, rising from none in OS1 to 8.5% in OS2 and 73.4% in OS3 (ptrend<0.001). The proportion of patients receiving more than one LLT compound also increased (OS1: 2.1%; OS2: 2.1%; OS3: 35.2%; ptrend<0.001). Use of ezetimibe (C10AX09) increased (OS1: 0.0%; OS2: 1.2%; OS3: 39.0%; ptrend<0.001) and fibrate use (C10AB) decreased (OS1: 5.3%; OS2: 3.3%; OS3: 0.6%; ptrend=0.015). Newly approved compounds (C10AX13 - C10AX16) were prescribed for 3.8% of patients in OS3. Among statin combination therapies, ezetimibe was predominantly used (93.5%). Mean LDL-C levels declined significantly from 123±38 mg/dL (OS1) to 115±39 mg/dL (OS2) and 77±38 mg/dL (OS3; ptrend<0.001). However, only 2.2% of patients in OS1, 2.5% in OS2 and 32.1% in OS3 reached an LDL-C target of <55 mg/dL (ptrend<0.001). This analysis suggests an upward trend in treatment intensity and a substantial improvement in LDL-C levels among T2DM patients with CAD. However, the majority of these patients still does not reach their LDL-C target.