
Personalized Statin Therapy and Coronary Atherosclerotic Plaque Burden in Asymptomatic Low/Intermediate-Risk Individuals
Author(s) -
Ranganath Muniyappa,
Radwa Noureldin,
Khaled Z. AbdElmoniem,
Riham H. El Khouli,
Jatin R. Matta,
Ahmed Hamimi,
Siri Ranganath,
Colleen Hadigan,
Lynnette K. Nieman,
Ahmed M. Gharib
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cardiorenal medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.661
H-Index - 21
eISSN - 1664-3828
pISSN - 1664-5502
DOI - 10.1159/000487205
Subject(s) - medicine , asymptomatic , statin , atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease , cardiology , ldl cholesterol , intensive care medicine , cholesterol , disease
Background: Current guidelines for the primary prevention of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease are based on the estimation of a predicted 10-year cardiovascular disease risk and the average relative risk reduction estimates from statin trials. In the clinical setting, however, decision-making is better informed by the expected benefit for the individual patient, which is typically lacking. Consequently, a personalized statin benefit approach based on absolute risk reduction over 10 years (ARR10 benefit threshold ≥2.3%) has been proposed as a novel approach. However, how this benefit threshold relates with coronary plaque burden in asymptomatic individuals with low/intermediate cardiovascular disease risk is unknown. Aims: In this study, we compared the predicted ARR10 obtained in each individual with plaque burden detected by coronary computed tomography angiography. Methods and Results: Plaque burden (segment volume score, segment stenosis score, and segment involvement score) was assessed in prospectively recruited asymptomatic subjects (n = 70; 52% male; median age 56 years [interquartile range 51–64 years]) with low/intermediate Framingham risk score (< 20%). The expected ARR10 with statin in the entire cohort was 2.7% (1.5–4.6%) with a corresponding number needed to treat over 10 years of 36 (22–63). In subjects with an ARR10 benefit threshold ≥2.3% (vs. < 2.3%), plaque burden was significantly higher (p = 0.02). Conclusion: These findings suggest that individuals with higher coronary plaque burden are more likely to get greater benefit from statin therapy even among asymptomatic individuals with low cardiovascular risk.