1 / 46

Hyperlipidemia

Hyperlipidemia. Screening for Dyslipidemia. U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) guidelines: Strongly recommends screening men age 35 or older for lipid disorders Recommends screening men age 20-35 if they are at increased risk for coronary heart disease

Download Presentation

Hyperlipidemia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hyperlipidemia

  2. Screening for Dyslipidemia • U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) guidelines: • Strongly recommends screening men age 35 or older for lipid disorders • Recommends screening men age 20-35 if they are at increased risk for coronary heart disease • Strongly recommends screening women over age 45 with CHD risk factors • Recommends screening women age 20-45 if they are at increase risk for coronary heart disease • No recommendation on screening men age 20-35 or women older than age 20 who are not at increased risk for CHD • The optimal interval for screening is uncertain

  3. Secondary causes of dyslipidemia • Cigarette smoking • Modestly lowers HDL and may induce insulin resistance • Obesity • Increased Total cholesterol, Triglycerides, LDL, and decreased HDL • Medications • Thiazides and Beta blockers may cause small changes in lipid profile • Atypical antipsychotics may cause weight gain and hypertriglyceridemia • Protease inhibitors are associated with abnormalities in lipid metabolism

  4. ATP III Guidelines • Based upon epidemiologic data that showed a relationship between total cholesterol and coronary risk • Influenced by the absence (primary prevention) or presence (secondary prevention) of preexisting CHD

  5. Risk Assessment • Obtain a fasting lipid profile • Identify the presence of CHD risk equivalents • Identify the presence of other major CHD risk factors • If 2 or more risk factors are present in a patient without CHD risk equivalents, calculate 10-year risk of CHD • Determine the risk category that establishes the LDL goal, when to start lifestyle mods, and when to consider drug therapy

  6. Risk Assessment • CHD Equivalents • Diabetes Mellitus • Symptomatic carotid artery disease • Peripheral arterial disease • Abdominal aortic aneurysm • Multiple risk factors that confer a 10-year CHD risk of >20% • Chronic renal insufficiency (GFR<60)??

  7. Risk Assessment • Other risk factors • Cigarette smoking • Hypertension (BP>140/90 or on anti-hypertensives) • HDL cholesterol <40mg/dl • Family hx of premature CHD (male first degree relatives <55 y/o or female <65y/o) • Age (men >45 y/o or women >55 y/o)

  8. Risk Assessment • Risk does not need to be calculated in people without CHD (or equivalents) who have 0-1 risk factors • If person without CHD (or equivalent) has 2 or more risk factors, use the ATP III modification of the Framingham risk tables to calculate 10-year risk of CHD

  9. The First Intervention • Therapeutic Lifestyle Changes (TLC) • TLC diet • Increase physical activity • Consider referral to Nutritionist/Dietician • Reassess Lipid panel in 6 weeks • Increase plant sterols • Increase dietary fiber • Nutritionist/Dietician if haven’t already • Re-reassess Lipids in 6 weeks

  10. HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors • Competitive inhibitors of HMG CoA reductase, the rate-limiting step in cholesterol biosynthesis • Majority of cholesterol synthesis appears to occur at night • Recommended that statins be administered in the evening or at bedtime • LDL decrease 18 – 55% • HDL increase 5 – 15% • Triglycerides decrease 7 – 30% • Side effects include hepatic dysfunction, muscle injury

  11. HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors

  12. HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors • Hepatic dysfunction • 0.5-3% risk of persistent elevations in aminotransferase levels • Dose dependent, occurs primarily in first three months of treatment • Get LFT’s before and 12 weeks after starting statin and after dose elevations • If ALT is >3 times upper limit of normal (on two different lab draws), recommend changing medication or lowering dose

  13. HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors • Muscle Injury • Myalgia->Myositis->Rhabdomyolysis • Approx 2-11% risk of myalgias, don’t always see elevation in CPK levels • Muscle sx’s usually begin weeks to months after starting statin • Increased risk with statins metabolized by cytochrome P-450 3A4 (lovastatin, simvastatin, atorvastatin) and concurrent therapy with other drugs (or breakfast juices) that interfere with CYP3A4 • Isoniazid, Clarithromycin, Fluconazole, Ketoconazole, Diltiazem, Erythromycin, Grapefruit juice

  14. HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors • Muscle Injury (cont.) • Also higher risk in patients with acute or chronic renal failure, obstructive liver disease, and hypothyroidism • Useful to obtain a CPK level prior to starting statin therapy, although serial monitoring of CPK’s are problematic • Better to have your patients tell you if they have any symptoms consistent with muscle toxicity • Pravastatin and Fluvastatin seem to have lower risk, may be reasonable to try one of these for patients who don’t tolerate other statins

  15. HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors • Pregnancy category X • Long-term safety data are lacking • Also uncertain whether long-term statin therapy leads to better outcomes compared with delaying treatment until patients have a higher CHD risk

  16. Bile Acid Sequestrants • Cholestyramine, Colestipol • LDL decrease 15 – 30% • HDL increase 3 – 5% • Triglycerides may increase • Side effects include nausea, bloating, cramping, constipation, elevated LFTs, and decreased absorption of other drugs • Don’t use if baseline hypertriglyceridemia

  17. Niacin • LDL decrease 5 – 25% (~3 g/d) • HDL increase 15 – 35% (~1 – 1.5 g/d) • Triglycerides decrease 20 – 50% • Side effects include flushing, pruritis, paresthesias, nausea, hepatotoxicity, hyperglycemia, hyperuricemia, increased homocysteine

  18. Fibric Acid Derivatives • Gemfibrozil, Fenofibrate • LDL decrease up 5 – 20% • May increase in pts with high triglycerides • HDL increase 10 – 20% • Triglycerides decrease 20 – 50% • Side effects include myopathy, gallstones, GI upset. Need to adjust for renal disease. • Fenofibrate is the preferred fibrate when patient is also on a statin medication • Gemfibrozil increases risk of statin muscle toxicity

  19. Ezetimibe (Zetia) • Inhibits absorption of cholesterol at the brush border of the small intestine • Added to statins • Additional 25% decrease in LDL • Additional 14% decrease in triglycerides • Slight increase in HDL • No significant side effects or drug interactions

  20. Omega-3 Fatty Acids (Fish Oil) • Generally requires large doses (2–6 gms tid) • LDL may increase variably (modest effect) • HDL increase ~5% (variable) • Triglycerides decrease 50% • Side effects include nausea, bloating, flatulence, diarrhea, fishy taste and odor, weight gain

  21. Plant Sterol-Containing Margarines • “Promise Activ” (Sitosterol, Campesterol) • “Benecol” (Sitostanol, Campestanol) • Plant sterols with structure similar to cholesterol; may inhibit cholesterol absorption • LDL decrease 13 – 20% with 3-5 grams/day • No significant change in HDL or triglycerides • Have not been evaluated for clinical end points

  22. Red Yeast Rice • Fermented rice product • Contain monacolins, naturally occurring substances that have HMG CoA reductase inhibitor activity • Monacolin K is the active ingredient in Lovastatin • 2.4 gram/day of Red Yeast Rice is equivalent to 4.8mg Lovastatin • Many different preparations and no standardization

  23. Starting Drug Therapy • Can start with statin at low-moderate doses that have been used in clinical trials • Pravastatin 40mg • Atorvastatin 10mg • Can also start with a moderately higher dose of a statin • Simvastatin 40mg • Atorvastatin 20mg • No studies have directly compared effects of low-moderate intensity tx with high-intensity tx for primary prevention • Get LFT’s and consider baseline CPK as previously discussed

  24. Managing Statin Side Effects • Muscle pain or elevated CPK • Reasonable to stop statin and re-challenge later with lower dose or different statin • Elevated ALT • <3 times upper limit of normal and asymptomatic • Reasonable to continue statin and monitor serial LFT’s and for development of symptoms • >3 times upper limit of normal and asymptomatic • Reasonable to stop statin, see if ALT resolves, and re-challenge with lower dose or different statin • May also continue statin at lower dose, or change to different statin

  25. What if patient is not at goal LDL? • Reemphasize importance of Therapeutic Lifestyle Changes • Increase dose of statin • Inefficient, doubling of dose only decreases LDL by another 6-7% • Change statin • Atorvastatin is strongest formulary statin • Add low dose bile acid sequestrant • Can give another 10% decrease in LDL • Add Zetia • Add Niacin • Add plant sterol-containing margarine

  26. Metabolic Syndrome • A constellation of lipid and non-lipid risk factors of metabolic origin • Closely linked with insulin resistance, where the normal actions of insulin are impaired • Diagnosis is made when 3 or more risk factors are present

  27. Metabolic Syndrome • Metabolic syndrome risk factors increase CHD risk at any LDL-level • A secondary target of therapy after LDL control • Management has two objectives • Reduce underlying causes (obesity, inactivity) • Treat associated nonlipid and lipid risk factors • First-line therapies for all risk factors associated with the metabolic syndrome are weight reduction and increased physical activity • If LDL is controlled and metabolic syndrome is present, TLC should stress weight reduction and physical activity

  28. Specific Dyslipidemias • Very High LDL (>190 mg/dl) • Usually genetic • Recommend family testing • Often need combined treatment to reach LDL goal (statin plus bile acid sequestrant)

  29. Hypertriglyceridemia • An independent risk factor for CHD • Accumulation of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (chylomicrons, VLDL, partially degraded VLDL, and IDL) in plasma • Chylomicrons and large VLDL are less atherogenic • Small VLDL is more atherogenic • VLDL cholesterol is easiest way to measure atherogenic remnant lipoproteins

  30. Hypertriglyceridemia • Since triglyceride-rich lipoproteins also transport cholesterol, hypercholesterolemia often accompanies hypertriglyceridemia • Contributing factors to hypertrig

  31. Hypertriglyceridemia

  32. Borderline High Trigs • 150-199 mg/dl • Emphasize TLC, particularly weight loss and exercise

  33. High Trigs • High (200-499 mg/dl) • Non-HDL (LDL + VLDL) becomes a secondary target of therapy • Want non-HDL to be less than 30 mg/dl higher than LDL • Goal VLDL <30 mg/dl • Statins have less VLDL lowering effect • May add Niacin or a fibrate (Fenofibrate is best choice with statin therapy)

  34. Very High Trigs • >500 mg/dl • Goal is to prevent pancreatitis • TLC and Fibrate or Niacin

  35. Isolated Hypertriglyceridemia • With low LDL and/or low HDL • May use drug therapy if TLC doestn’t work and patient has a strong family history of CHD or multiple risk factors • Fibrates are probably the best choice • May add Niacin • Consider Fish Oil

  36. Questions?

More Related