Lipitor
(atorvastatin), Zocor (simvastatin),
Crestor (rosuvastatin), and other
statins can dramatically lower levels of artery-clogging cholesterolin the
blood, an ability that makes them hugely popular in our cholesterol-rich
country. Heart researchers have estimated that these drugs could save 1,000 lives each week for every 10 million
high-risk heart disease patients who take them.
One
study of nearly 20,000 patients found that, after a heart attack, taking a
statin can prevent the risk of death within one year by 25%. Among patients who
don't even have cardiovascular disease, taking a statin preventively can reduce
the risk of a major coronary event like heart attack by about 30%.
When
Denise Foley, 57, of Philadelphia, went through menopause, her cholesterol shot
up from 160 to 240. Her doctor warned her that that number, along with her
family history of heart disease, put her at risk for a heart attack or stroke.
But she didn't want to take heart medication. "I really wanted to lower my
risk without drugs," she says. "I lost 30 pounds, I exercised, and I
went on a vegetarian diet. But I just couldn't budge it."
Seven
years ago she was prescribed Lipitor to control her high cholesterol. Soon
after, she started feeling depressed for no reason. "I went to a party
filled with good friends, and I sat in the corner and thought everyone hated
me," she says. Turns out depression can be a side effect of Lipitor. Her
doctor switched her to Zocor, which she now takes successfully. Her cholesterol
is in a safe range. "I worry about the long-term effects of these
drugs," she says. "But I also know that without medication, I might
be dead from a heart attack or stroke."
As
of December 2006, an estimated 13.1 million Americans had a prescription for a
statin, an increase of 500,000 patients in just over a year. In 2004, Americans
spent more than $9 billion on Lipitor alone, more than for any other
prescription drug. The arrival in 2006 of two inexpensive generic
statins—pravastatin and simvastatin—will make statins available to even more
patients.
How statins
work
Statins
lower cholesterol in two ways: They encourage the liver to clear LDL (bad
cholesterol) from the blood, and they block an enzyme that the body needs to
make new cholesterol.
At
high doses, statins can nudge up your HDL (good cholesterol) while lowering
your LDL (bad cholesterol) by 50% or more. Studies have shown that, for
patients who already have heart disease, taking a statin can reduce the risk of
fatal coronary events within five years by up to 40%. According to Thomas H.
Lee, a cardiologist and editor in chief of the Harvard Heart Letter, even
people who don't have high cholesterol can cut their risk of heart disease by a
third simply by taking a statin.
Even
given their wild popularity, "statins are still underprescribed,"
says Thomas Allison, PhD, a cardiovascular specialist at the Mayo Clinic in
Rochester, Minn. "The drugs could do much more good if more people took
them to prevent heart disease, not just treat it," he says. "Most
people aren't receiving cholesterol treatment until they've had a heart
attack."
Joe
Marzan, 32, a heart attack survivor in Prineville, Ore., was given a preventive
prescription for statins because he had high cholesterol and a fatty diet, and
because his father had had coronary bypass surgery. "I didn't take it
regularly, though," he says, because he thought he was too young to worry
about heart disease.
When
a checkup showed that his total cholesterol had climbed to an incredible 400,
his doctor urged him to come in for more aggressive treatment, including higher
doses of Zocor or Lipitor. But Marzan, who has two kids, was in the process of
moving to a new town and put off the appointment. His heart attack struck seven
months later. Now he counsels other heart disease patients on the importance of
compliance. "If I had listened to my doctor, I might have dodged this
bullet," he says.
Statin side
effects and risks
Statins
generally don't cause many side effects, but potentially the most common
problem is muscle pain, stiffness, or weakness, which affects about 1% of study
subjects but many more patients in the real world, because study subjects are
carefully screened, says Eliot Brinton, MD, a preventive cardiologist and
lipidologist at the University of Utah School of Medicine. Other side effects
can include tiredness, bloating, constipation, and leg and abdominal pain. More
serious side effects—including liver damage—are rare. Roughly one out of six
million patients taking Lipitor has a fatal reaction. "Walking down to the
store to get the drug is more dangerous than taking it," Allison says.
Some
experts have expressed concern that the emphasis on statins could draw
attention away from the importance of diet and lifestyle. A 2007 study of 71
patients who began taking statins found that 44% felt their physician had
prescribed the statin even though the patients preferred to try dietary
measures to control their cholesterol. And although 76% of the patients wanted
to reduce their dietary fat intake when they began statin treatment, after six
months there was no significant change in the group's fat intake.
But
the biggest risk with statins is not taking them. Only about half of all
patients prescribed a statin end up reaching their cholesterol goals, mainly
because far too many people leave far too many pills untouched.
One
recent study of nearly 6,500 patients found that they refilled their monthly
prescriptions an average of less than five times a year.
Source:
http://www.health.com/
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