A new study from Harvard T.H. Chan School of
Public Health researchers has found that it would be cost-effective to treat
48-67% of all adults aged 40-75 in the U.S. with cholesterol-lowering statins.
By expanding the current recommended treatment guidelines and boosting the
percentage of adults taking statins, an additional 161,560
cardiovascular-related events could be averted, according to the researchers.
"The new cholesterol treatment guidelines
have been controversial, so our goal for this study was to use the best
available evidence to quantify the tradeoffs in health benefits, risks, and
costs of expanding statin treatment. We found that the new guidelines represent
good value for money spent on healthcare, and that more lenient treatment
thresholds might be justifiable on cost-effectiveness grounds even accounting
for side-effects such as diabetes and myalgia," said Ankur Pandya,
assistant professor of health decision science at Harvard Chan School and lead
author of the study.
The study appears online July 14, 2015 in the Journal
of the American Medical Association.
The percentage of Americans taking statins has
jumped in recent years--as of 2012, 26% of all adults over age 40 were taking
them, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC)--and so has controversy surrounding their use. In November 2013, the
American Heart Association (AHA) and the American College of Cardiology (ACC)
recommended that statins be prescribed for people with a 7.5% or greater risk of
heart attack or stroke over a 10-year period, including many with no existing
cardiovascular issues. Previous guidelines had advised statin use only if the
risk was 10-20% or higher.
After the 2013 recommendations were issued,
proponents of expanding statin use said there was strong evidence that they
reduce risk of heart attack and stroke; critics said the risks were
overestimated, that healthy adults would be overtreated, and that more people
would be at increased risk for negative side effects, such as memory loss, type
2 diabetes, and muscle damage.
The researchers did a cost-effectiveness
analysis of the ACC-AHA guidelines to find the optimal value for the 10-year
CVD risk threshold. They used a measure known as the quality-adjusted life-year
(QALY)--a measure of the burden of a disease in terms of both the quality and
the quantity of life lived. QALYs are frequently used to assess the monetary
value of using particular medical interventions; they are based on the number
of years of "quality" life that would be gained by such
interventions. In the U.S. today, health economists typically consider
$100,000/QALY and $150,000/QALY reasonable in terms of what the public is
willing to pay for health gains.
The researchers found that the current 10-year
cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk threshold (?7.5%) was acceptable in terms of
cost-effectiveness ($37,000/QALY), but that more lenient treatment thresholds
of ?4.0% or ?3.0% would be optimal under criteria of <$100,000/QALY or
<$150,000/QALY and would avert an estimated additional 125,000-160,000
CVD-events. They also found that the optimal treatment threshold was
particularly sensitive to patient preferences for taking a pill daily, which
suggests that the decision to initiate statins for primary CVD prevention should
be made jointly by patients and physicians.
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