The following is an article I found from the C.B.C. website via Statin Nation through a post on Facebook
'Cholestrol-lowering statins are heavily promoted for heart patients but new research is calling into question their use as a preventative medicine.
Statins
such as atorvastatin (Lipitor), rosuvastatin (Crestor) and simvastatin (Zocor)
are among the widely used prescription drugs.
Since
the drugs were first marketed 30 years ago in the U.S. for preventing a second
heart attack or stroke in those who've already had one, there's been a shift
toward prescribing statins for otherwise healthy people in Canada and the U.S.
"These
are patients who really haven't had an event, a cardiovascular event, but they
seem to be at high risk," said pharmacy Prof. Muhammad Mamdani, who works
at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto.
"You
also get populations where people seem to be relatively healthy, their cholestrol-lowering aren't that high, but for whatever reason, they are placed on a
statin. That's a patient population that is a lot more debatable and some
practices may not be warranted."
More than 38
mllion prescriptions for the class of medications that includes statins
were dispensed in Canada last year, according to IMS Brogan. (Kas Roussy/CBC)
The
medical community is debating the pros and cons of using statins for prevention
as more independent research comes out on side-effects. This week, a study
in JAMA Internal Medicine suggested statins may be associated with an
increase in musculoskeletal conditions and pain, especially in physically
active individuals.
"If
you look at all the studies that have ever been done with statins for primary
prevention, so for people who have never had a heart attack or a stroke, if you
give a statin to a patient for about five years we can reduce the chance of a
person having a heart attack or a stroke by about one per cent," said
James McCormack, a professor of pharmaceutical sciences at the University of
British Columbia. Shifting focus from cholesterol numbers.
Other
potential side-effects include risk of Type 2 diabetes, reversible muscle
damage and short-term kidney damage.
In
Canada, as in the U.S., the majority of statin prescriptions go to primary
prevention patients, not people with established heart disease, said Dr. Lee
Green, a professor and chair of the department of family medicine at the
University of Alberta who has surveyed doctors on their prescribing."It seems we need to retrain physicians, and the public, to focus on actual risks, not on a convenient number like cholesterol level," Green said in an email.
In
March, epidemiologist Colin Dormuth, an assistant professor in the department
of anesthesiology, pharmacology and therapeutics at the University of
British Columbia, looked at the use of high potency statins and rates of
admission for acute kidney injury.
"There
are a lot of patients out there taking the drugs right now who don't have a
history of heart disease who are hoping to prevent heart disease and in all
likelihood will derive absolutely no benefit," Dormuth said.
In
medical circles, discussions continue. A review published in January by British
researchers who combed through trials sponsored by drug companies concluded
that "statins are likely to be cost-effective in primary prevention."
People
like Jim Matheson, 62, of Toronto, are left to decide with their doctor.
"Within
five years he told me that I had a 20 per cent chance of either having a stroke
or a heart attack," Matheson recalled. "He offered me the pill but I
didn't want to take it."
Instead,
Matheson opted to eat healthier foods and exercise more. His brother on the
other hand decided to go on statins.
"I
have sent him, probably for every article he has sent me on how good they are I
have sent him 20 that says how bad they are. We're still having the
dialogue," Matheson said.
"We'll
see who lasts longer," he quipped.'
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