Could combination cholesterol therapy save lives?

People who have had a heart attack should immediately be offered a combination of cholesterol lowering drugs with statins and another cholesterol medication, new research suggests.

The study found that people with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) – which includes those who have experienced a heart attack or unstable angina – were 47 per cent less likely to die within three years if they started taking a high dose statin and ezetimibe straight away, compared to just the high dose statin.

The results indicate that out of every 21 patients taking the double treatment for three years, one death was prevented.

Researchers suggest thousands of lives could be changed every year if treatment guidelines are changed to reflect the findings.

The research was led by Maciej Banach, professor of cardiology at the Medical University of Lodz, Poland, and adjunct professor at the Ciccarone Centre for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in the US.

“Patients with acute coronary syndrome, such as those who have already had a heart attack, face a much higher risk of further heart problems,” he said.

African American doctor talking to patient in office
(Alamy/PA)

“Current guidelines, including those on prevention from the European Society of Cardiology, recommend a stepwise approach, first offering a statin only.

“This study shows that if we act quickly and decisively to lower patients’ cholesterol with this combination of treatment, we can drastically reduce the risk of death.

“Around seven million people suffer acute coronary syndrome every year and the majority of cases are linked to high cholesterol and a build-up of fat in the blood vessels.

“We have effective cholesterol lowering treatments, but we must make sure the people who need them are taking them.”

The study included data on 1536 patients with ACS who were part of the national Polish Registry of Acute Coronary Syndromes (PL-ACS).

Half of them were treated with a high dose statin only, while the other half were treated with a combination of a high dose statin and ezetimibe, which is used to treat high cholesterol.

Here’s everything you need to know about combination cholesterol therapy.

What are statins and ezetimibe?

Both statins and ezetimibe are widely available drugs that have been shown to effectively lower the amount of cholesterol in the blood.

When people have high levels of cholesterol, it can block their blood vessels and increase the risk of heart disease or stroke.

ACS affects around seven million people worldwide, including around four million heart attack patients.

Researchers say that ensuring all those at risk are started on both treatments straight away could prevent an estimated 330,000 deaths per year.

What is combination cholesterol therapy?

According to the National  Institute for Health and Care Excellence, combination cholesterol therapy is the combination of ezetimibe and statin.

Often, medical professionals just prescribe statins – the most common medicine used for high cholesterol. You take one tablet a day, and the NHS states they usually need to taken for life.

What are the benefits of combination cholesterol therapy?

According to the findings of the study, published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, those who started taking a statin and ezetimibe straight away were less likely to die of any cause in the following three years.

However, the risk of death was already lower after only 52 days of treatment.

Do you take statins? Have they helped? Why not share your experience in the comments section below?

Also read: Nuts that lower bad cholesterol

– With PA

1 COMMENT

  1. Read The Chloresterol Myth.

    The AMA is peddling 1960s technology at the behest of the $31billion pharmaceutical companies. The Lipid Hypothesises is just that, a hypothesis that is unproven. Many unbiased studies have shown the hypothesis to be wrong!
    The medical industry promotes the theory from Ancil Keys that has been shown to be corrupt. S insists that took part in the Framingham study have recanted the findings. Yet doctors are constrained from giving g advice contrary to the AMA.

    Saturated fats are not the enemy. Dietary fats do not equate to body fat. The real culprit is sugar and refined carbohydrates.

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