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  • Title: Suboptimal achievement of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol targets in French patients with coronary heart disease. Contemporary data from the DYSIS II ACS/CHD study.
    Author: Ferrières J, Rouyer MV, Lautsch D, Ashton V, Ambegaonkar BM, Brudi P, Gitt AK, Dyslipidemia International Study (DYSIS) II France Study Group.
    Journal: Arch Cardiovasc Dis; 2017 Mar; 110(3):167-178. PubMed ID: 28209375.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: European guidelines recommend a low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) target of<1.8mmol/L (70mg/dL), and/or a≥50% reduction when the target level cannot be reached, for patients at very high cardiovascular risk, and high-potency lipid-lowering therapy (LLT) in patients with an acute coronary syndrome (ACS). AIM: To document the prevalence of lipid abnormalities and the achievement of lipid targets among patients surviving an ACS and in patients with stable coronary heart disease (CHD), using data from the DYSIS II study. METHODS: DYSIS II was an observational cross-sectional study conducted in 21 countries (2012-2014). We report data from the French cohort, comprising patients hospitalized with an ACS and patients diagnosed with stable CHD. Data on patient characteristics, risk factors, treatments and lipid profile were collected. LDL-C target achievement was assessed based on the European guidelines endorsed by the French Society of Cardiology. RESULTS: Of the 468 ACS patients, 277 (59.2%) were receiving LLT at admission to hospital; 22.6% were hospitalized for a recurrent event. Statins were used in 96.6% (450/466) of patients at discharge and in 95.1% (310/326) at 120-day follow-up, at which time 50.6% (80/158) of patients with available data achieved the LDL-C goal. Most of the 436 patients with stable CHD (97.2%) were on LLT (56.8% on high-intensity therapy); 29.2% of patients on LLT met the LDL-C treatment target<1.8mmol/L (70mg/dL). CONCLUSION: These observational data show the progress made in the treatment of ACS from the acute phase up to 3 months, and highlight key areas for improvement in the prevention of recurrent events in patients with CHD in France. The use of higher intensity or combination LLT as recommended in secondary prevention are needed to increase the achievement of LDL-C treatment targets and reduce the risk of morbidity and mortality due to CHD.
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