PCSK9 inhibitors and ezetimibe for the reduction of cardiovascular events: a clinical practice guide...
PCSK9 inhibitors and ezetimibe for the reduction of cardiovascular events: a clinical practice guideline with risk-stratified recommendations
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Author / Creator
Hao, Qiukui , Aertgeerts, Bert , Guyatt, Gordon , Bekkering, Geertruida E , Vandvik, Per Olav , Khan, Safi U , Rodondi, Nicolas , Jackson, Rod , Reny, Jean-Luc , Al Ansary, Lubna , Van Driel, Mieke , Assendelft, Willem J J , Agoritsas, Thomas , Spencer, Frederick , Siemieniuk, Reed A C , Lytvyn, Lyubov , Heen, Anja Fog , Zhao, Qian , Riaz, Irbaz Bin , Ramaekers, Dirk , Okwen, Patrick Mba , Zhu, Ye , Dawson, Annabel , Ovidiu, Mersa Caius , Vanbrabant, Willy , Li, Sheyu and Delvaux, Nicolas
Publisher
England: British Medical Journal Publishing Group
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Language
English
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Publisher
England: British Medical Journal Publishing Group
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Scope and Contents
Contents
AbstractClinical questionIn adults with low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels >1.8 mmol/L (>70 mg/dL) who are already taking the maximum dose of statins or are intolerant to statins, should another lipid-lowering drug be added, either a proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin 9 (PCSK9) inhibitor or ezetimibe, to reduce the risk of major cardiovascular events? If so, which drug is preferred? Having decided to use one, should we add the other lipid-lowering drug?Current practiceMost guidelines emphasise LDL cholesterol targets in their recommendations for prescribing PCSK9 inhibitors and/or ezetimibe in adults at high risk of experiencing a major adverse cardiovascular event. However, to achieve these goals in very high risk patients with statins alone is almost impossible, so physicians are increasingly considering other lipid-lowering drugs solely for achieving LDL cholesterol treatment goals rather than for achieving important absolute cardiovascular risk reduction. Most guidelines do not systematically assess the cardiovascular benefits of adding PCSK9 inhibitors and/or ezetimibe for all risk groups across primary and secondary prevention, nor do they report, in accordance with explicit judgments of assumed patients’ values and preferences, absolute benefits and harms and potential treatment burdens.RecommendationsThe guideline panel provided mostly weak recommendations, which means we rely on shared decision making when applying these recommendations. For adults already using statins, the panel suggests adding a second lipid-lowering drug in people at very high and high cardiovascular risk but recommends against adding it in people at low cardiovascular risk. For adults who are intolerant to statins, the panel recommends using a lipid-lowering drug in people at very high and high cardiovascular risk but against adding it in those at low cardiovascular risk. When choosing to add another lipid-lowering drug, the panel suggests ezetimibe in preference to PCSK9 inhibitors. The panel suggests further adding a PCSK9 inhibitor to ezetimibe for adults already taking statins at very high risk and those at very high and high risk who are intolerant to statins.How this guideline was createdAn international panel including patients, clinicians, and methodologists produced these recommendations following standards for trustworthy guidelines and using the GRADE approach. The panel identified four risk groups of patients (low, moderate, high, and very high cardiovascular risk) and primarily applied an individual patient perspective in moving from evidence to recommendations, though societal issues were a secondary consideration. The panel considered the balance of benefits and harms and burdens of starting a PCSK9 inhibitor and/or ezetimibe, making assumptions of adults’ average values and preferences. Interactive evidence summaries and decision aids accompany multi-layered recommendations, developed in an online authoring and publication platform (www.magicapp.org) that also allows re-use and adaptation.The evidenceA linked systematic review and network meta-analysis (14 trials including 83 660 participants) of benefits found that PCSK9 inhibitors or ezetimibe probably reduce myocardial infarctions and stroke in patients with very high and high cardiovascular risk, with no impact on mortality (moderate...
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Full title
PCSK9 inhibitors and ezetimibe for the reduction of cardiovascular events: a clinical practice guideline with risk-stratified recommendations
Authors, Artists and Contributors
Author / Creator
Aertgeerts, Bert
Guyatt, Gordon
Bekkering, Geertruida E
Vandvik, Per Olav
Khan, Safi U
Rodondi, Nicolas
Jackson, Rod
Reny, Jean-Luc
Al Ansary, Lubna
Van Driel, Mieke
Assendelft, Willem J J
Agoritsas, Thomas
Spencer, Frederick
Siemieniuk, Reed A C
Lytvyn, Lyubov
Heen, Anja Fog
Zhao, Qian
Riaz, Irbaz Bin
Ramaekers, Dirk
Okwen, Patrick Mba
Zhu, Ye
Dawson, Annabel
Ovidiu, Mersa Caius
Vanbrabant, Willy
Li, Sheyu
Delvaux, Nicolas
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Primary Identifiers
Record Identifier
TN_cdi_proquest_miscellaneous_2660103437
Permalink
https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_proquest_miscellaneous_2660103437
Other Identifiers
ISSN
1756-1833
E-ISSN
1756-1833
DOI
10.1136/bmj-2021-069066