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Current Pharmaceutical Design

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1381-6128
ISSN (Online): 1873-4286

Lipid-lowering Drug Therapy in Elderly Patients

Author(s): Heiner K. Berthold and Ioanna Gouni-Berthold

Volume 17, Issue 9, 2011

Page: [877 - 893] Pages: 17

DOI: 10.2174/138161211795428803

Price: $65

Abstract

Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of death among elderly patients and > 80% of all coronary deaths occur in patients > 65 years. Cerebrovascular events are also associated with older age. Since elevated cholesterol concentrations are a risk factor for cardiovascular disease, lipid-lowering drugs, especially statins, are in widespread use for prevention. There is substantial underutilization of statins in the elderly population although meta-analyses of randomized trials have shown that in elderly secondary prevention patients they reduce all-cause mortality by approximately 22%, CHD mortality by 30%, non-fatal myocardial infarction (MI) by 26% and stroke by 25% over a treatment period of 5 years. Relative risk reduction is greater or at least equal to the one in younger patients, but absolute risk reduction is greater in the elderly because the event rate is higher. The benefit from statin treatment seems to start beyond 1 year of treatment. Data on primary prevention in the elderly are less clear. There is a significant reduction in CHD events, CHD deaths and all-cause mortality but numbers needed to treat (NNT) are higher than in secondary prevention. Treatment decisions have to consider the individual patients situation regarding multimorbidity, polypharmacy and patient wishes. Economic considerations have to be made in some health systems. Statins have no role in the prevention or the treatment of dementia. Statins are generally safe and safety is equal in younger and older age groups. Their prescription should not be denied to patients for reasons of age alone. Other lipid-lowering drugs play only a minor role in cardiovascular disease (CVD) event prevention because convincing outcome studies are largely missing. A primary prevention statin trial in the very elderly is urgently needed.

Keywords: Elderly patients, geriatrics, cardiovascular risk, cardiovascular events, coronary heart disease, stroke, lipid-lowering drugs, statins, Cerebrovascular, multimorbidity, octogenarians, malnutrition, atorvastatin, rosuvastatin, pravastatin, hemorrhagic, cholestyramine, ciclosporin, nefazodone, verapamil, diltiazem, hemodialysis


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