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Research ArticleClinical Practice Guidelines

PEER simplified lipid guideline 2023 update

Prevention and management of cardiovascular disease in primary care

Michael R. Kolber, Scott Klarenbach, Michel Cauchon, Mike Cotterill, Loren Regier, Raelene D. Marceau, Norah Duggan, Rebecca Whitley, Alex S. Halme, Tanis Poshtar, G. Michael Allan, Christina S. Korownyk, Joey Ton, Liesbeth Froentjes, Samantha S. Moe, Danielle Perry, Betsy S. Thomas, James P. McCormack, Jamie Falk, Nicolas Dugré, Scott R. Garrison, Jessica E.M. Kirkwood, Jennifer Young, Émélie Braschi, Allison Paige, Jen Potter, Justin Weresch and Adrienne J. Lindblad
Canadian Family Physician October 2023; 69 (10) 675-686; DOI: https://doi.org/10.46747/cfp.6910675
Michael R. Kolber
Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Alberta in Edmonton.
MD MSc CCFP
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  • For correspondence: mkolber@ualberta.ca
Scott Klarenbach
Nephrologist and Professor in the Department of Medicine and Dentistry at the University of Alberta.
MD MSc FRCPC
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Michel Cauchon
Professor in the Département de médecine familiale et d’urgence at Université Laval in Québec City, Que.
MD CCFP FCFP
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Mike Cotterill
Assistant Professor in the Division of Clinical Sciences at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine University based in Wawa.
MD CCFP
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Loren Regier
Consulting Editor for the RxFiles Academic Detailing Program at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon.
BA BSP
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Raelene D. Marceau
Assistant Professor in the School of Nursing at the University of Northern British Columbia in Prince George.
MN PhD
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Norah Duggan
Associate Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at Memorial University of Newfoundland in St John’s.
MD CCFP FCFP
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Rebecca Whitley
Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg.
MD MSc CCFP
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Alex S. Halme
Internist-geriatrician at CISSS Montérégie-est (Hôpital Pierre-Boucher) and CISSS de la Gaspésie in Quebec.
RPh MD FRCPC
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Tanis Poshtar
Patient in Edmonton.
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G. Michael Allan
Director of Programs and Practice Support at the College of Family Physicians of Canada (CFPC).
MD CCFP FCFP
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Christina S. Korownyk
Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Alberta.
MD CCFP
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Joey Ton
Program Manager of Programs and Practice Support at the CFPC.
PharmD
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Liesbeth Froentjes
Research assistant in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Alberta.
MSc
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Samantha S. Moe
Clinical Evidence Expert for the CFPC.
PharmD ACPR
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Danielle Perry
Clinical Evidence Expert for the CFPC and Assistant Adjunct Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Alberta.
RN MSc
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Betsy S. Thomas
Clinical Evidence Expert for the CFPC and Assistant Adjunct Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Alberta.
BScPharm
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James P. McCormack
Professor in the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.
PharmD
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Jamie Falk
Pharmacist and Associate Professor in the College of Pharmacy at the University of Manitoba.
PharmD
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Nicolas Dugré
Pharmacist at the CIUSSS du Nord-de-l’Île-de-Montréal and Clinical Associate Professor in the Faculty of Pharmacy at the University of Montréal in Quebec.
PharmD MSc BCACP
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Scott R. Garrison
Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Alberta.
MD CCFP PhD
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Jessica E.M. Kirkwood
Family physician and Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Alberta.
MD CCFP(AM)
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Jennifer Young
Family physician practising in Collingwood, Ont.
MD CCFP(EM) FCFP
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Émélie Braschi
Hospitalist at the Élisabeth Bruyère Hospital in Ottawa, Ont, and a physician adviser at the CFPC.
MD PhD CCFP
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Allison Paige
Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Manitoba.
MD CCFP
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Jen Potter
Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Manitoba.
MD CCFP
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Justin Weresch
Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont.
MD CCFP
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Adrienne J. Lindblad
Clinical Evidence Expert Lead for the CFPC and Associate Clinical Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Alberta.
PharmD ACPR
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Abstract

Objective To update the 2015 clinical practice guideline and provide a simplified approach to lipid management in the prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD) for primary care.

Methods Following the Institute of Medicine’s Clinical Practice Guidelines We Can Trust, a multidisciplinary, pan-Canadian guideline panel was formed. This panel was represented by primary care providers, free from conflicts of interest with industry, and included the patient perspective. A separate scientific evidence team performed evidence reviews on statins, ezetimibe, proprotein convertase subtilisin-kexin type 9 inhibitors, fibrates, bile acid sequestrants, niacin, and omega-3 supplements (docosahexaenoic acid with eicosapentaenoic acid [EPA] or EPA ethyl ester alone [icosapent]), as well as on 11 supplemental questions. Recommendations were finalized by the guideline panel through use of the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation methodology.

Recommendations All recommendations are presented in a patient-centred manner designed with the needs of family physicians and other primary care providers in mind. Many recommendations are similar to those published in 2015. Statins remain first-line therapy for both primary and secondary CVD prevention, and the Mediterranean diet and physical activity are recommended to reduce cardiovascular risk (primary and secondary prevention). The guideline panel recommended against using lipoprotein a, apolipoprotein B, or coronary artery calcium levels when assessing cardiovascular risk, and recommended against targeting specific lipid levels. The team also reviewed new evidence pertaining to omega-3 fatty acids (including EPA ethyl ester [icosapent]) and proprotein convertase subtilisin-kexin type 9 inhibitors, and outlined when to engage in informed shared decision making with patients on interventions to lower cardiovascular risk.

Conclusion These updated evidence-based guidelines provide a simplified approach to lipid management for the prevention and management of CVD. These guidelines were created by and for primary health care professionals and their patients.

Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the leading cause of mortality globally.1 Cardiovascular-related conditions (eg, hypertension, diabetes) are common reasons for visiting primary care providers.2 There is an increasing number of lipid-lowering agents used to reduce CVD risk including statins, ezetimibe, proprotein convertase subtilisin-kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibitors, fibrates, bile acid sequestrants (BAS), niacin, and omega-3 supplements (docosahexaenoic acid [DHA] with eicosapentaenoic acid [EPA] or EPA ethyl ester alone [icosapent]). Owing to emerging evidence on diagnostic testing and therapeutic options, as well as recent publications of other lipid-related guidelines,3-7 we have updated our 2015 PEER simplified lipid guideline.8 Similar to the 2015 guideline, this update focuses on primary prevention, prioritizes high-level evidence, incorporates shared decision making, and provides simplified recommendations designed for use in primary care.

Family physicians deliver most health care services in Canada, including most primary prevention for CVDs.9,10 Therefore, our intended audience consists of family physicians and other primary care providers, as well as their teams. For this reason, recommendations must be accessible, applicable, and feasible to implement in primary care settings. The concept of time needed to treat is also introduced in this updated guideline.11 Most primary care providers lack sufficient time to provide all the care required in their communities of practice,12 and most guidelines do not consider the time needed to implement recommendations for eligible patients.11 In our evidence-to-decision framework, based on the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) methodology,13 we considered the time needed for clinicians and patients to implement guideline recommendations in light of opportunity costs and competing demands.14

METHODS

We followed the principles of the Institute of Medicine’s Clinical Practice Guidelines We Can Trust,15 the Guidelines International Network,16 and the GRADE methodology.13

Panel membership

Nine health professionals (5 family physicians [M.R.K., M. Cauchon, M. Cotterill, N. Duggan, R.W.]; 2 internal medicine specialists [A.S.H., S.K.]; 1 nurse practitioner [R.D.M.]; 1 pharmacist [L.R.]), 1 patient (T.P.), and 1 non-voting member (pharmacist and guideline methodologist, A.J.L.), comprised the guideline panel. Member selection was based on profession, practice setting, location, and absence of conflicts of interest with the pharmaceutical industry. A separate evidence team of 19 health professionals (A.J.L., M.R.K., G.M.A., E.B., N. Dugré, J.F., L.F., S.R.G., J.E.M.K., C.S.K., J.P.M., S.S.M., J.P., A.P., D.P., B.S.T., J.T., J.W., J.Y.) with expertise in evidence synthesis were responsible for the evidence review. No member of the guideline panel or evidence team had conflicts of interest with industry (Appendix 1, available from CFPlus*). Recommendations created by the guideline panel were based on evidence reviews performed by the evidence team.

Evidence review

The evidence team performed a systematic review of systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on the effects of 7 classes of lipid-lowering therapies—statins, ezetimibe, PCSK9 inhibitors, fibrates, BAS, niacin, and omega-3 supplements (DHA with EPA or EPA ethyl ester alone [icosapent])—on patient-oriented outcomes, such as major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), cardiovascular mortality, and all-cause mortality. Methods and results of these systematic reviews are available elsewhere (page 701).17,18 We categorized our findings into subgroups for primary and secondary CVD prevention. We collected adverse event data—primarily overall, serious, and withdrawals due to adverse events, as well as adverse events specifically relevant to the intervention (eg, muscle-related adverse events for statins). We excluded evidence specifically pertaining to pediatric patients, pregnant or lactating patients, or patients with familial hypercholesterolemia.

Additionally, the evidence team completed rapid reviews to answer 11 supplemental clinical questions chosen by the guideline panel (Appendix 1*). These supplemental questions included the following:

  • For patients without CVD who are not taking lipid-lowering therapy, does repeat lipid testing as part of CVD risk estimation every 5 to 10 years meaningfully change risk estimates compared with more frequent testing?

  • In patients without established CVD, does the use of apolipoprotein B (apoB) measurement meaningfully change CVD risk estimation more than standard risk estimates alone?

  • In patients without established CVD, does the use of lipoprotein a (Lp[a]) meaningfully change CVD risk estimation more than standard risk estimates alone?

  • In patients without established CVD, does the use of coronary artery calcium (CAC) scores meaningfully change CVD risk estimation more than standard risk estimates alone?

  • In patients with or at risk of CVD, does attainment of specific low-density lipoprotein (LDL), apoB, or non–high-density lipoprotein levels decrease the risk of CVD compared with use of statins without achieving specific targets?

  • In patients taking statin therapy, do statins negatively affect cognition, memory, cognitive decline, or dementia compared with not taking statins?

  • In patients reporting muscle-related symptoms associated with statins, does rechallenging, switching statins, using a lower dose, or using an alternative dosing strategy improve statin use?

  • In patients intolerant to statins, do any lipid-lowering drugs (PCSK9 inhibitors, BAS, icosapent, fibrates, niacin, or ezetimibe) lower the risk of CVD compared with not taking statins?

  • In patients older than age 75, do statins reduce cardiovascular events compared to placebo, without substantially increasing harms?

  • In patients with or at risk of CVD, does increasing physical activity (including cardiac rehabilitation) reduce the risk of CVD?

  • In patients with or at risk of CVD, does the Mediterranean diet reduce the risk of CVD?

Other nonlipid-related CVD prevention strategies beyond lipid-lowering therapies (eg, acetylsalicylic acid, colchicine) were beyond the scope of this guideline.

Guideline process

The work of the guideline panel was iterative and involved multiple rounds of discussion on clinical question creation, evidence review, and drafting and approving recommendations. Following the principles of the GRADE methodology, recommendations were developed by taking into account the trade-off between favourable and unfavourable outcomes, the quality of evidence, patient preferences and values, and resource use (including medication costs and time to implement recommendations).13 The evidence standard was informally set higher for primary than secondary prevention. This is because primary prevention involves asking those who are asymptomatic to undergo screening and potential treatments, with potential harms, costs, and inconvenience. Regarding the strength of the recommendations, the word recommend indicates a strong recommendation, while suggest indicates a weak recommendation.13

This guideline provides an update of the 2015 PEER simplified lipid guidelines.8 Select recommendations from the 2015 guideline were carried forward (Appendix 1*).

RECOMMENDATIONS

Box 1 summarizes all recommendations. Full evidence reviews are available in the systematic review (page 701)18 and Appendix 1.* The GRADE certainty of evidence and strengths of each individual recommendation are listed in Table 1 and Appendix 1,* respectively.

Box 1.

Recommendations summary

Screening and testing

  • 1. In patients without CVD (primary prevention), we suggest lipid testing as part of global CVD risk estimation in men age ≥40 y and women age ≥50 y

    • - Testing can be considered earlier for patients with known traditional CVD risk factors including but not limited to hypertension, family history of premature CVD, chronic kidney disease, diabetes, and smoking

  • 2. When reassessing CVD risk in patients not taking lipid-lowering therapy, we suggest reassessing lipids no more than every 5 y and preferably 10 y, unless risk factors change

  • 3. We recommend against fasting for lipid testing. Nonfasting lipids can be used to calculate global CVD risk

  • 4. We recommend against risk estimation for those with pre-existing CVD as they are already considered at high risk

  • 5. We suggest against adding CAC scores to cardiovascular risk assessment

  • 6. We recommend against using Lp(a) or apoB to determine a patient’s cardiovascular risk

Interventions

  • 7. We suggest encouraging patients to participate in physical activity. The specific type, duration, and intensity are likely less important than adherence

  • 8. We recommend the Mediterranean diet to reduce cardiovascular risk

  • 9. For primary prevention in patients with a 10-y CVD risk of ≥20%, we recommend clinicians discuss the initiation of statins (preferably high-intensity statins) with patients

  • 10. For primary prevention in patients with a 10-y CVD risk of 10% to 19%, we suggest clinicians discuss the initiation of statins (preferably moderate-intensity statins) with patients

  • 11. For primary prevention in patients with a 10-y CVD risk of <10%, we suggest retesting lipid levels in 5 y at the earliest and preferably in 10 y, with risk estimation

  • 12. In primary prevention, we recommend against using non-statin lipid-lowering drugs as monotherapy or in combination with statins

  • 13. In secondary prevention, we recommend clinicians discuss the risks and benefits and encourage initiation of high-intensity statin therapy with patients

  • 14. In secondary prevention, if additional cardiovascular risk reduction is desired beyond maximized statin therapy, we recommend a discussion of ezetimibe or PCSK9 inhibitors. Given potential adverse effects (atrial fibrillation, bleeding), we suggest adding icosapent to statins only after considering ezetimibe or PCSK9 inhibitors

Considerations in patients older than 75 y

  • 15. For primary prevention in patients older than 75 y, we recommend against lipid testing and the assessment of risk using a CVD risk calculator

  • 16. We suggest against the routine initiation of statin therapy for primary prevention in patients older than 75 y. However, it may be reasonable to discuss the benefits and risks of statin therapy for primary prevention in some patients older than 75 y whose overall health status is good

  • 17. In patients older than 75 y who have had a cardiovascular event, we recommend clinicians discuss the benefits and risks with patients and encourage the initiation of statin therapy

  • 18. In patients already taking and tolerating a statin, we recommend against stopping the statin or reducing the dose just because patients have aged beyond 75 y

  • 19. We recommend against altering statin prescribing for cognitive concerns

Statin intolerance

  • 20. In patients who do not tolerate a specific statin regimen due to nonsevere muscle adverse effects, we recommend any statin intensity over non-statin lipid therapy. This could include the same or different statins, doses, or alternate daily dosing, based on shared decision making

  • 21. For primary prevention in patients unable to tolerate any statin rechallenge, we suggest against use of non-statin pharmacologic therapies

  • 22. For secondary prevention in patients unable to tolerate any statin rechallenge, we suggest discussion of ezetimibe, fibrates, or PCSK9 inhibitors. Given potential adverse events of icosapent (atrial fibrillation, bleeding), it should be considered only once other options have been explored

Follow-up

  • 23. We recommend against the use of repeat lipid testing and cholesterol targets after a patient begins lipid-lowering therapy

  • 24. We suggest against testing for baseline CK or ALT levels in healthy, asymptomatic individuals before starting statin therapy. Testing may be appropriate based on symptoms or other risk factors

ALT—alanine aminotransferase, apoB—apolipoprotein B, CAC—coronary artery calcium, CK—creatine kinase, CVD—cardiovascular disease, Lp(a)—lipoprotein a, PCSK9—proprotein convertase subtilisin-kexin type 9.

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Table 1.

GRADE certainty-of-evidence table for all recommendations

A 2-page guideline summary (Figure 1, available from CFPlus*), a patient handout (Appendix 2, available from CFPlus*), and an updated decision aid (https://decisionaid.ca/cvd/) were created to assist with shared decision making between patients and clinicians. The guideline and accompanying tools underwent external peer review by 32 clinicians and patients (Appendix 3, available from CFPlus*).

Figure 1.
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Figure 1.

PEER simplified lipid guideline 2023 summary

Recommendations in this guideline are general recommendations designed for most patients. However, they may require adaptation for individual patient encounters, integrating evidence-based recommendations with the clinician’s experience and the patient’s values, preferences, and expectations. Recommendations do not apply to pregnant or lactating patients, pediatric patients, or those with familial hypercholesterolemia.

Screening and testing

Recommendations:

  • In patients without CVD (primary prevention), we suggest lipid testing as part of global CVD risk estimation in men aged 40 or older and women aged 50 or older.

    • - Testing can be considered earlier for patients with known traditional CVD risk factors including, but not limited to, hypertension, family history of premature CVD, chronic kidney disease, diabetes, and smoking.

  • When reassessing cardiovascular risk in patients not taking lipid-lowering therapy, we suggest reassessing lipid levels no more than every 5 years and preferably every 10 years, unless risk factors change.

  • We recommend against fasting for lipid testing. Nonfasting lipid levels can be used to calculate global CVD risk.

  • We recommend against risk estimation for those with pre-existing CVD, as they are already considered to be at high risk.

  • We recommend against using Lp(a) or apoB to determine a patient’s cardiovascular risk.

  • We suggest against adding CAC scores to cardiovascular risk assessment.

Lipid levels are one of many risk factors for CVD, with age having the largest impact on risk.8 A validated CVD risk calculator is needed to estimate a patients’ future CVD risk, as well as the potential benefits and harms of treatments. As variability exists among risk calculators, practitioners should estimate risk with the same calculator, preferably one validated for their population. For this guideline, our recommendations were based on the Framingham risk score (FRS) calculator, which has been validated in Canada.8 For primary prevention, a patient’s CVD risk should be determined regardless of the presence or absence of higher risk conditions (eg, diabetes).8 This risk calculation will allow patients to make informed choices about the potential benefits and risks of therapy.

Testing lipid levels more frequently than every 5 to 10 years is generally unnecessary owing to minimal annual changes in lipid levels (about 1%) and considerable variability (10% to 20%) in both analytic and biological results (Appendix 1*).

In patients younger than 75, traditional cardiovascular risk factors have a reasonable accuracy in predicting cardiovascular events, with a C statistic of about 0.75.19 Adding Lp(a) and apoB measurements to traditional cardiovascular risk factors improves the C statistic by 0.0017 and 0.0004, respectively (Appendix 1*). Adding CAC levels to traditional risk factors improves the C statistic by 0.04 (Appendix 1*). Since changes in C statistics of 0.025 to 0.05 are considered small and changes of less than 0.025 are considered very small,20 it is unlikely that these results are clinically meaningful. Additionally, the lack of widespread availability of CAC testing limits its current use in primary care.

Nonpharmacologic interventions

Recommendations:

  • We suggest encouraging patients to participate in physical activity. The specific type, duration, and intensity are likely less important than adherence.

  • We recommend the Mediterranean diet to reduce cardiovascular risk.

For patients with established CVD, exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation decreases all-cause mortality by 10% (relative risk reduction) and cardiovascular mortality and myocardial infarction by 20% to 40% (relative risk reduction) at 3 years (Appendix 1*). Evidence for physical activity in primary prevention is less robust (Appendix 1*). Regardless, physical activity provides other noncardiac benefits and has minimal harms.

Compared with low-fat diets, the Mediterranean diet results in a 25% to 30% relative reduction in future cardiovascular events in both primary and secondary prevention populations over approximately 5 to 7 years (Appendix 1*). Additional approaches to reducing CVD risk (eg, smoking cessation, treatment of hypertension) should be discussed with patients but were not explicitly reviewed in this guideline.

Pharmacologic interventions

Recommendations:

  • In primary prevention for patients with a 10-year CVD risk of 20% or greater, we recommend clinicians discuss the initiation of statins (preferably high-intensity statins) with patients.

  • In primary prevention for patients with a 10-year CVD risk of 10% to 19%, we suggest clinicians discuss the initiation of statins (preferably moderate-intensity statins) with patients.

  • In primary prevention for patients with a 10-year CVD risk of less than 10%, we suggest retesting lipid levels in 5 years at the earliest, and preferably at 10 years, with risk estimation.

  • In primary prevention, we recommend against using non-statin lipid-lowering drugs as monotherapy or in combination with statins.

  • In secondary prevention, we recommend clinicians discuss the risks and benefits and encourage initiation of high-intensity statin therapy with patients.

  • In secondary prevention, if additional cardiovascular risk reduction is desired beyond maximized statin therapy, we recommend discussing the initiation of ezetimibe or PCSK9 inhibitors. Given potential adverse effects (atrial fibrillation, bleeding), we suggest adding EPA ethyl ester (icosapent) to statins only after ruling out ezetimibe or PCSK9 inhibitors.

In primary prevention, only statins have substantial evidence of benefit, decreasing MACE, cardiovascular mortality, and all-cause mortality (risk ratio [RR]=0.75, 0.83, and 0.91, respectively).18 Fibrates decrease MACE but have no effect on cardiovascular or all-cause mortality. Fibrates also have increased incidence of renal dysfunction (increased serum creatinine, RR=1.88 to 5.01), liver dysfunction (altered liver test results, RR=19.1), and pancreatitis (RR=1.74 to 2.74).18 The other medication classes either showed no benefit in primary prevention, lacked evidence as monotherapy, or predominantly enrolled special populations (such as patients with familial hypercholesterolemia) in primary prevention.18

We recognize that cardiovascular risk is continuous and the relative benefit of statins is likely consistent across spectrums of risk. The primary prevention risk categories (<10%, 10% to 19%, or ≥20%) are arbitrary and not evidence based. In secondary prevention, statins remain first-line therapy. Adding ezetimibe and PCSK9 inhibitors to statin therapy in secondary prevention decreases MACE but not cardiovascular mortality or all-cause mortality. Clinicians could consider discussing these agents with patients who have had recent or recurrent CVD or for secondary prevention in those with considerable ongoing risk factors. While EPA ethyl ester (icosapent) was shown to decrease MACE and cardiovascular mortality in systematic reviews of mixed (primary and secondary prevention) patient populations, it increases the risk of atrial fibrillation (RR=1.35; 95% CI 1.10 to 1.66) and bleeding (RR=1.49; 95% CI 1.20 to 1.84).18

Risk estimation

Risk estimation varies with different populations, over different time frames (eg, 5 vs 10 years), with different outcomes included, and when different models and calculators are used.21 Recently, researchers attempted to recalibrate and validate the FRS within a large Canadian population.22 Reporting on 5-year estimates, the recalibrated FRS may also overestimate risk, albeit not to the same extent as traditional FRS estimates. However, uncertainty exists on how to best estimate 10-year risk based on 5-year data. Therefore, until 10-year data are available, we will continue to use the traditional 10-year Framingham model in our patient decision aid and risk calculator, with the understanding that risk in some Canadians may be overestimated by roughly 30%.

Considerations in older adults

Recommendations:

  • In primary prevention for patients older than 75 years of age, we recommend against lipid testing and the assessment of risk using a CVD risk calculator.

  • We suggest against the routine initiation of statin therapy for primary prevention in patients older than 75.

    • - It may be reasonable to discuss the benefits and risks of statin therapy for primary prevention in some patients older than 75 whose overall health status is good.

  • In patients already taking and tolerating a statin, we recommend against stopping the statin or reducing the dose just because patients have aged beyond 75 years.

  • In secondary prevention for patients older than 75, we recommend clinicians discuss the benefits and risks and encourage the initiation of statin therapy with patients.

  • We recommend against altering statin prescribing for cognitive concerns.

Many commonly used risk calculators (eg, FRS) exclude patients older than 75. In addition, the diagnostic accuracy of predicting future cardiovascular events is lower for those older than 75 (C statistic=0.62)23 than for younger adults (C statistic approximately 0.75).19 Best evidence suggests that statins for primary prevention in patients older than 75 does not statistically significantly decrease MACE (Appendix 1*), therefore routine initiation of statin therapy in this population is not encouraged. It may be reasonable, however, for practitioners to discuss statin therapy for primary prevention in some patients older than 75 whose overall health status is good. In addition, for older adults taking statins for primary prevention, there currently is no evidence to support stopping statins just because they have reached 75 years of age. In 2015, the use of pravastatin in patients 65 years and older was not recommended owing to a potential increase in cancer incidence.8 However, updated evidence including 2 large systematic reviews found no increased risk of cancer incidence or death with statins (Appendix 1*). Additionally, we recommend against altering statin prescribing owing to cognitive concerns, as the evidence does not support a link between decreased cognition and statin use (Appendix 1*).

Statin intolerance

Recommendations:

  • In patients who do not tolerate a specific statin regimen owing to nonsevere muscle adverse effects, we recommend any statin intensity over non-statin lipid therapy. This could include the same or different statins, doses, or alternate daily dosing, based on shared decision making.

  • For primary prevention in patients unable to tolerate any statin rechallenge, we suggest against the use of non-statin pharmacologic therapies.

  • For secondary prevention in patients unable to tolerate any statin rechallenge, we suggest discussion of ezetimibe, fibrates, or PCSK9 inhibitors. Given potential adverse events of EPA ethyl ester (icosapent) (atrial fibrillation, bleeding), it should be considered only after other options are ruled out.

Most muscle-related complaints in people taking statins are not statin-induced. For patients in their first year of statin therapy, the risk of muscle symptoms is approximately 15% compared with 14% among those taking placebo (Appendix 1*). After a year, the differences in muscle symptoms between statin and placebo are not statistically significant. Given the benefits of statins in primary and secondary CVD prevention, and that most patients will tolerate a statin retrial (Appendix 1*), statin rechallenge should be undertaken for patients who experience nonsevere muscle complaints. Rechallenge options could include using the same or a different statin or dose, or using every-other-day dosing. There is no evidence that one approach is superior to another for tolerability (Appendix 1*).

In the unlikely event that a patient does not tolerate any statin (or dose), there are limited data to guide practice. Ezetimibe, PCSK9 inhibitors, EPA ethyl ester (icosapent), and fibrates have not been adequately studied in patients who cannot tolerate statins. In addition, PCSK9 inhibitors, ezetimibe, and EPA ethyl ester (icosapent) have minimal evidence as monotherapy or in primary prevention (Appendix 1*).18 For these reasons, we recommend against non-statin therapies in primary prevention. However, in secondary prevention, where the risk of recurrent disease is higher (but recognizing the paucity of evidence), patients and clinicians may wish to explore these non-statin alternatives.

Follow-up

Recommendations:

  • We recommend against the use of repeat lipid testing and cholesterol targets after a patient begins lipid-lowering therapy.

  • We suggest against testing for baseline creatine kinase or alanine aminotransferase levels before starting statin therapy in healthy, asymptomatic individuals. Testing may be appropriate based on symptoms or other risk factors.

At the time of the evidence review, the best available evidence did not prove whether targeting treatment to specific LDL levels or simply using or adding medications that have been shown to reduce the risk of CVD is best for patients (Appendix 1*). Most clinical trials have used fixed-dose (mostly moderate-intensity) statins based on CVD risk and have found benefit occurs irrespective of LDL levels achieved (Appendix 1*). Given the large degree of analytic and biological variation in lipid testing, the associated costs and inconvenience of repeat testing (including visits to discuss repeat test results), and the challenge in achieving targets, the treat-to-target approach is less desirable (Appendix 1*).24,25 Since the evidence review was completed, a key RCT26 demonstrated that a high-potency statin strategy was not inferior to the treat-to-target strategy in preventing recurrent CVD (Table 2).26-29

Since completion of our evidence review, several relevant studies have been published (Table 2).26-29

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Table 2.

New studies since evidence review

DISCUSSION

This guideline represents an update to our 2015 PEER simplified lipid guideline.8 We conducted 7 medication class systematic reviews of systematic reviews and reviewed the evidence pertaining to 11 supplemental questions. While many of our recommendations are similar to those from 2015, we have new recommendations pertaining to Lp(a), apoB, and CAC, as well as for omega-3 fatty acids, EPA ethyl ester (icosapent), and PCSK9 inhibitors.

Key additions to this guideline pertain to the recommendations on non-statin lipid therapies, with the introduction of new medication classes and the emergence of new evidence. While statins continue to be recommended for primary and secondary CVD prevention, ezetimibe or PCSK9 inhibitors can be added for patients with CVD when additional risk reduction is desired. Due to increased risk of atrial fibrillation and bleeding, EPA ethyl ester (icosapent) should be considered only for secondary prevention in patients already taking statins and in whom ezetimibe and PCSK9s were considered. Statin rechallenge should be performed for patients with presumed nonsevere statin intolerance. Finally, for patients taking statin therapy, we recommend against repeat lipid testing and attempting to achieve cholesterol level targets. This is based on the variability of lipid results; the time required to repeat lipid testing, discuss the results, and implement new treatment strategies; and the challenge of achieving targets. In addition, a recent RCT26 found that using a maximum-tolerated statin dose results in similar outcomes compared with the treat-to-target strategy (Table 2).26-29

Strengths and weaknesses of the guideline

A strength of this guideline is that we followed the Institute of Medicine’s best practices.15 We formed a multidisciplinary guideline panel free from conflicts of interests that consisted mainly of primary care providers and a patient to generate recommendations. We used systematic reviews of systematic reviews of RCTs to evaluate patient-oriented outcomes of potential benefit and harm. We incorporated the principle of time needed to treat to help with our evidence-to-decision framework.11 Finally, we valued simplification when possible and promoted shared decision making. One weakness is that we did not assess the quality of the individual RCTs beyond what the systematic reviews reported. Additionally, we found repetitive inclusion of the same RCTs in multiple systematic reviews. For example, we included 26 systematic reviews related to PCSK9 inhibitors, but most of the evidence stemmed from 2 RCTs.18 To prevent these issues, future guideline updates may consider extracting RCT-level evidence. Finally, we recognize that solely relying on RCTs for adverse events is not optimal.

Future guideline updates

Updates to this guideline could occur when additional key evidence is published. For example, the STAREE (Statins in Reducing Events in the Elderly) trial is randomizing about 10,000 primary prevention patients older than 70 years to atorvastatin or placebo to determine the effect on death, disability, and MACE.30 The SITE (Statins in the Elderly) trial is randomizing primary prevention patients 75 years or older who are taking statins to either a discontinuation or continuation arm to determine the effect on all-cause mortality.31 In addition, 2 RCTs are currently examining how CAC level scores compare with traditional risk factors for predicting future cardiovascular events.32,33 Finally, we will consider updating our guideline when 10-year Canadian Framingham risk estimate data are reported.

We encourage future research on non-statin medications as monotherapy in primary prevention, as well as on the effects of currently available non-statin therapies on CVD in patients with true statin intolerance. We also encourage consistent definitions of MACE (eg, 3-point end point of cardiovascular death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and nonfatal stroke) as current MACE definitions vary between studies and commonly contain end points of lesser clinical relevance as defined by the COMET (Core Outcome Measures in Effectiveness Trials) Initiative.34

Other guidelines

Our guideline is most similar to the 2020 US Veterans Affairs–Department of Defense (VA-DoD) guideline.5 Both guidelines included multidisciplinary panels with no conflicts of interest and systematically evaluated literature to provide evidence for recommendations on key clinical questions. Both recommend infrequent lipid testing, recommend against using LDL levels to adjust treatment intensity, and encourage statin rechallenge for patients with presumed statin intolerance. For secondary prevention, the VA-DoD guideline recommends adding ezetimibe or PCSK9 inhibitors to statins in those patients “willing to intensify treatment”5 or icosapent if triglyceride levels remain elevated. We were less enthusiastic about icosapent due to potential adverse events. Another slight difference is the approach to “lower-risk” patients. The VA-DoD guideline recommends statins for primary prevention in patients with a 10-year risk of 6% to 12% and who “prefer statin treatment.”5 The US Preventive Services Task Force recommends prescribing statins to those with a risk of 7.5%.35 To calculate risk, the US Preventive Services Task Force uses the pooled cohort equation (PCE), the VA-DoD uses PCE or FRS, while we use FRS. Outcomes from the PCE include coronary artery disease death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and fatal and nonfatal strokes, while the FRS outcomes include myocardial infarction, angina or coronary insufficiency, heart failure, strokes, and claudication. As a result, an FRS of about 10% is similar to a PCE risk score of about 6%.

Finally, the time needed to treat must be considered in all primary care guidelines. While we did not formally calculate the time needed to treat for every recommendation, we understand that clinicians may have many competing priorities with each patient encounter. We therefore ensured that recommendations were feasible and practical in busy clinicians’ offices.

Conclusion

Using the best available evidence, GRADE methodology, and a guideline panel well represented by family medicine, we present a simplified approach to the prevention and management of CVD in primary care. This simplified guideline and knowledge translation tool will empower family physicians and other primary health care providers and will allow them to discuss potential benefits and harms of pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic choices with their patients through shared decision making.

Acknowledgment

We thank the College of Family Physicians of Canada, the Ontario College of Family Physicians, the Alberta College of Family Physicians, and the Saskatchewan College of Family Physicians for their financial support and commitment to guidelines by and for family physicians. We also thank Odelia Moses and Deanna Draga for their administrative support.

Notes

Editor’s key points

  • ▸ This guideline provides an update of the 2015 PEER simplified lipid guidelines. Focusing on the needs of primary care providers and their teams, this guideline was designed to be applicable and feasible in practices.

  • ▸ Similar to the 2015 recommendations, attainment of lipid targets is not recommended. Statins remain first-line therapy for primary cardiovascular disease prevention based on a patient’s estimated cardiovascular risk and shared decision making. Currently there is no role for lipoprotein a, apolipoprotein B, or coronary artery calcium in risk assessment.

  • ▸ Non-statin therapies, such as ezetimibe and proprotein convertase subtilisin-kexin type 9 inhibitors, may be added to statins in secondary prevention when there is a need for additional cardiovascular risk reduction.

  • ▸ Statin rechallenge should be performed in patients with nonsevere statin intolerance.

  • ▸ A 2-page guideline summary, a patient handout, and an updated online decision aid were created to assist with shared decision making between patients and clinicians.

Footnotes

  • ↵* Appendices 1 to 3 and the 2-page guideline summary (Figure 1) are available from https://www.cfp.ca. Go to the full text of the article online and click on the CFPlus tab.

  • Contributors

    Members of the Evidence Team (Dr G. Michael Allan, Dr Émélie Braschi, Dr Nicolas Dugré, Dr Jamie Falk, Liesbeth Froentjes, Dr Scott R. Garrison, Dr Jessica E.M. Kirkwood, Dr Michael R. Kolber, Dr Christina S. Korownyk, Dr Adrienne J. Lindblad, Dr James P. McCormack, Dr Samantha S. Moe, Dr Allison Paige, Danielle Perry, Dr Jen Potter, Betsy S. Thomas, Dr Joey Ton, Dr Justin Weresch, Dr Jennifer Young) completed the evidence reviews. Members of the guideline panel (Dr Michael R. Kolber, Dr Scott Klarenbach, Dr Michel Cauchon, Dr Mike Cotterill, Loren Regier, Dr Raelene D. Marceau, Dr Norah Duggan, Dr Rebecca Whitley, Dr Alex S. Halme, Tanis Poshtar, Dr Adrienne J. Lindblad) formulated the recommendations based on the evidence reviews. All authors contributed to preparing the manuscript for submission.

  • Competing interests

    There are no conflicts involving the pharmaceutical industry. Any other potential competing interests are presented in Appendix 1, available from CFPlus.*

  • This article is eligible for Mainpro+ certified Self-Learning credits. To earn credits, go to https://www.cfp.ca and click on the Mainpro+ link.

  • This article has been peer reviewed.

  • La traduction en français de cet article se trouve à https://www.cfp.ca dans la table des matières du numéro d’octobre 2023 à la page e189.

  • Copyright © 2023 the College of Family Physicians of Canada

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Canadian Family Physician: 69 (10)
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PEER simplified lipid guideline 2023 update
Michael R. Kolber, Scott Klarenbach, Michel Cauchon, Mike Cotterill, Loren Regier, Raelene D. Marceau, Norah Duggan, Rebecca Whitley, Alex S. Halme, Tanis Poshtar, G. Michael Allan, Christina S. Korownyk, Joey Ton, Liesbeth Froentjes, Samantha S. Moe, Danielle Perry, Betsy S. Thomas, James P. McCormack, Jamie Falk, Nicolas Dugré, Scott R. Garrison, Jessica E.M. Kirkwood, Jennifer Young, Émélie Braschi, Allison Paige, Jen Potter, Justin Weresch, Adrienne J. Lindblad
Canadian Family Physician Oct 2023, 69 (10) 675-686; DOI: 10.46747/cfp.6910675

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PEER simplified lipid guideline 2023 update
Michael R. Kolber, Scott Klarenbach, Michel Cauchon, Mike Cotterill, Loren Regier, Raelene D. Marceau, Norah Duggan, Rebecca Whitley, Alex S. Halme, Tanis Poshtar, G. Michael Allan, Christina S. Korownyk, Joey Ton, Liesbeth Froentjes, Samantha S. Moe, Danielle Perry, Betsy S. Thomas, James P. McCormack, Jamie Falk, Nicolas Dugré, Scott R. Garrison, Jessica E.M. Kirkwood, Jennifer Young, Émélie Braschi, Allison Paige, Jen Potter, Justin Weresch, Adrienne J. Lindblad
Canadian Family Physician Oct 2023, 69 (10) 675-686; DOI: 10.46747/cfp.6910675
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