Does Adopting Western Low-density Lipoprotein Cholesterol Targets Expose Indians to a Higher Risk of Cardiovascular Events? Expert Opinion From the Lipid Association of India

Adverse cardiovascular (CV) events have declined in Western countries due at least in part to aggressive risk factor control, including dyslipidemia management. The American and European (Western) dyslipidemia treatment guidelines have contributed significantly to the reduction in atherosclerotic ca...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the Association of Physicians of India 2024-10, Vol.72 (10), p.71
Hauptverfasser: Puri, Raman, Mehta, Vimal, Bansal, Manish, Duell, P Barton, Iyengar, S S, Shetty, Sadanand, Graham, Ian, Mohan, J C, Kaul, Upendra, Rao, Dayasagar, Agarwala, Rajeev, Wander, Gurpreet Singh, Hazra, Prakash, Kumar, Soumitra, Wangnoo, S K, Zargar, Abdul Hamid, Saboo, Banshi, Yusuf, Jamal, Vijan, Vinod M, Aggarwal, Prem, Chandra, Sarat, Kasliwal, Ravi R, Manoria, P C, Rabbani, M U, Chag, Milan C, Prabhakar, D, Khan, Aziz, Bordoloi, Neil, Palanippan, Saravanan, Mahajan, Kunal, Pradhan, Akshay, Jain, Dharmender, Murugnathan, A, Dabla, Pradeep Kumar, Desai, Nagaraj, Tiwaskar, Mangesh H, Nair, Devaki R, Singh, Charanjeet, Panda, Jayant, Gupta, Vitull, Sahoo, Prashant, Wong, Nathan D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Adverse cardiovascular (CV) events have declined in Western countries due at least in part to aggressive risk factor control, including dyslipidemia management. The American and European (Western) dyslipidemia treatment guidelines have contributed significantly to the reduction in atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) incidence in the respective populations. However, their direct extrapolation to Indian patients does not seem appropriate for the reasons described below. In the US, mean low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) levels have markedly declined over the last 2 decades, correlating with a proportional reduction in CV events. Conversely, poor risk factor control and dyslipidemia management have led to increased CV and coronary artery disease (CAD) mortality rates in India. The population-attributable risk of dyslipidemia is about 50% for myocardial infarction, signifying its major role in CV events. In addition, the pattern of dyslipidemia in Indians differs considerably from that in Western populations, requiring unique strategies for lipid management in Indians and modified treatment targets. The Lipid Association of India (LAI) recognized the need for tailored LDL-C targets for Indians and recommended lower targets compared to Western guidelines. For individuals with established ASCVD or diabetes with additional risk factors, an LDL-C target of
ISSN:0004-5772
DOI:10.59556/japi.72.0692