Managing Hypercholesterolemia in Adults Older Than 75 years Without a History of Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease: An Expert Clinical Consensus From the National Lipid Association and the American Geriatrics Society.

Vera Bittner, Sunny A Linnebur, Dave L Dixon, Daniel E Forman, Ariel R Green, Terry A Jacobson, Ariela R Orkaby, Joseph J Saseen, Salim S Virani
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Abstract

The risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease increases with advancing age. Elevated LDL-cholesterol and non-HDL-cholesterol levels remain predictive of incident atherosclerotic cardiovascular events among individuals older than 75 years. Risk prediction among older individuals is less certain because most current risk calculators lack specificity in those older than 75 years and do not adjust for co-morbidities, functional status, frailty, and cognition which significantly impact prognosis in this age group. Data on the benefits and risks of lowering LDL-cholesterol with statins in older patients without atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease are also limited since most primary prevention trials have included mostly younger patients. Available data suggest that statin therapy in older primary prevention patients may reduce atherosclerotic cardiovascular events and that benefits from lipid-lowering with statins outweigh potential risks such as statin-associated muscle symptoms and incident Type 2 diabetes mellitus. While some evidence suggests the possibility that statins may be associated with incident cognitive impairment in older adults, a preponderance of literature indicates neutral or even protective statin-related cognitive effects. Shared decision-making which is recommended for all patients when considering statin therapy is particularly important in older patients. Randomized clinical trial data evaluating the use of non-statin lipid-lowering therapy in older patients are sparse. Deprescribing of lipid-lowering agents may be appropriate for select patients older than 75 years with life-limiting diseases. Finally, a patient-centered approach should be taken when considering primary prevention strategies for older adults.

管理75岁以上无动脉粥样硬化性心血管疾病史的高胆固醇血症:来自国家脂质协会和美国老年医学会的专家临床共识
动脉粥样硬化性心血管疾病的风险随着年龄的增长而增加。在75岁以上的人群中,ldl -胆固醇和非hdl -胆固醇水平升高仍可预测动脉粥样硬化性心血管事件的发生。老年人的风险预测不太确定,因为目前大多数风险计算方法在75岁以上的老年人中缺乏特异性,并且没有调整对该年龄组预后有显著影响的合共病、功能状态、虚弱和认知。对于没有动脉粥样硬化性心血管疾病的老年患者,他汀类药物降低ldl -胆固醇的益处和风险的数据也有限,因为大多数初级预防试验主要包括年轻患者。现有数据表明,他汀类药物治疗对老年一级预防患者可减少动脉粥样硬化性心血管事件,他汀类药物降脂的益处大于潜在风险,如他汀类药物相关肌肉症状和2型糖尿病的发生。虽然一些证据表明他汀类药物可能与老年人的偶发性认知障碍有关,但大量文献表明他汀类药物相关的认知作用是中性的,甚至是保护性的。当考虑他汀类药物治疗时,建议所有患者共同决策,这对老年患者尤其重要。评估老年患者使用非他汀类降脂治疗的随机临床试验数据很少。对于年龄超过75岁且患有限制生命疾病的患者,可适当停用降脂药。最后,在考虑老年人一级预防策略时,应采取以患者为中心的方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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