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Statins attenuate but do not eliminate the reverse epidemiology of total serum cholesterol in patients with non-ischemic chronic heart failure

Fröhlich, Hanna; Raman, Nandita; Täger, Tobias; Schellberg, Dieter; Goode, Kevin M.; Kazmi, Syed; Grundtvig, Morten; Hole, Torstein; Cleland, John G.F.; Katus, Hugo A.; Agewall, Stefan; Clark, Andrew L.; Atar, Dan; Frankenstein, Lutz

Authors

Hanna Fröhlich

Nandita Raman

Tobias Täger

Dieter Schellberg

Profile image of Kevin Goode

Dr Kevin Goode K.M.Goode@hull.ac.uk
Research Systems Project Manager / Business Analyst

Syed Kazmi

Morten Grundtvig

Torstein Hole

John G.F. Cleland

Hugo A. Katus

Stefan Agewall

Andrew L. Clark

Dan Atar

Lutz Frankenstein



Abstract

© 2017 Elsevier B.V. Background In patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) increasing levels of total serum cholesterol are associated with improved survival – while statin usage is not. The impact of statin treatment on the “reverse epidemiology” of cholesterol is unclear. Methods 2992 consecutive patients with non-ischemic CHF due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction from the Norwegian CHF Registry and the CHF Registries of the Universities of Hull, UK, and Heidelberg, Germany, were studied. 1736 patients were individually double-matched on both cholesterol levels and the individual propensity scores for statin treatment. All-cause mortality was analyzed as a function of baseline cholesterol and statin use in both the general and the matched sample. Results 1209 patients (40.4%) received a statin. During a follow-up of 13,740 patient-years, 360 statin users (29.8%) and 573 (32.1%) statin non-users died. When grouped according to total cholesterol levels as low (≤ 3.6 mmol/L), moderate (3.7–4.9 mmol/L), high (4.8–6.2 mmol/L), and very high ( >  6.2 mmol/L), we found improved survival with very high as compared with low cholesterol levels. This association was present in statin users and non-users in both the general and matched sample (p  <  0.05 for each group comparison). The negative association of total cholesterol and mortality persisted when cholesterol was treated as a continuous variable (HR 0.83, 95%CI 0.77–0.90, p  <  0.001 for matched patients), but it was less pronounced in statin users than in non-users (F-test p  <  0.001). Conclusions Statins attenuate but do not eliminate the reverse epidemiological association between increasing total serum cholesterol and improved survival in patients with non-ischemic CHF.

Citation

Fröhlich, H., Raman, N., Täger, T., Schellberg, D., Goode, K. M., Kazmi, S., Grundtvig, M., Hole, T., Cleland, J. G., Katus, H. A., Agewall, S., Clark, A. L., Atar, D., & Frankenstein, L. (2017). Statins attenuate but do not eliminate the reverse epidemiology of total serum cholesterol in patients with non-ischemic chronic heart failure. International journal of cardiology, 238, 97-104. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2017.03.028

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 8, 2017
Online Publication Date Mar 9, 2017
Publication Date Jul 1, 2017
Deposit Date May 23, 2018
Publicly Available Date May 23, 2018
Journal International Journal of Cardiology
Print ISSN 0167-5273
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 238
Pages 97-104
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2017.03.028
Keywords Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/535492
Publisher URL https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167527317315231?via%3Dihub
Contract Date May 23, 2018

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