Autore/Fonte: Daniele Franchi, Alessandro Marturano, Tecla Mastronuzzi
Linee guida italiane su diagnosi e gestione del malato di celiachia: cosa cambia?
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Ottobre 2024
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Autore/Fonte: Daniele Franchi, Alessandro Marturano, Tecla Mastronuzzi
Autore/Fonte: Carlo Fabris, Silvia Addesa, Barbara Branca
Autore/Fonte: Gaetano D’Ambrosio, Gaetano Piccinocchi, Damiano Parretti, Gerardo Medea
Autore/Fonte: GOLD
Autore/Fonte: NICE
Circulation, Volume 150, Issue Suppl_1, Page A4139026-A4139026, November 12, 2024. Background:Familial hypercholesteremia (FH) leads to elevated low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD). Although treatable, FH is underdiagnosed. Lipid lowering therapy may mask diagnostic pretreatment LDL-C levels. Participants of ASCVD trials may be enriched for FH, so ASCVD trial enrollment may be a unique contact point to opportunistically diagnose FH.Hypothesis:The population of the ACCELERATE trial of evacetrapib and ASCVD outcomes is enriched for FH.Methods:ACCELERATE is a phase 3 cardiovascular outcomes trial which randomized 12,092 patients with high-risk vascular disease to receive evacetrapib or placebo. FH was not reported. Using participant-level data, we estimated pretreatment LDL-c using validated corrections based on type and dose of statin therapy. We defined severe hypercholesterolemia as pretreatment LDL-C ≥ 190 mg/dl and FH as severe hypercholesterolemia with total cholesterol > 290 mg/dL in a first or second degree relative, consistent with Simon Broome register criteria. We compared trial prevalence to general prevalence (severe hypercholesterolemia ~7%, FH ~0.4%). We evaluated the adjusted association of severe hypercholesterolemia with the primary trial endpoint of ASCVD events using multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression.Results:Data were available for 11,993 participants (99%). The prevalence of severe hypercholesteremia was 15% (1809/11993). The prevalence of FH was 2.1% (255/11993). Pretreatment LDL-C ≥ 190 mg/dL, as compared with pretreatment LDL-C < 190 mg/dL, was significantly associated with a higher incidence of the primary ASCVD trial endpoint (15% vs 13.5% respectively, adjusted hazard ratio 1.19; 95% CI 1.03-1.38, P=0.021;Figure).Conclusion:In a participant-level analysis of a rigorous, independently adjudicated ASCVD outcomes trial, severe hypercholesterolemia and FH were more prevalent in the trial population than the general population based on pretreatment LDL-C calculation. Severe hypercholesterolemia was significantly associated with higher ASCVD incidence. ASCVD trial enrollment may be a novel high-yield contact point for index FH case identification using simple pretreatment LDL-C calculation.
Autore/Fonte: NICE
Autore/Fonte: Cystic Fibrosis Foundation
Autore/Fonte: ASGE, ESGE
Autore/Fonte: AMD, ADI, SIO, SICOB, SIGE
Autore/Fonte: JAMA Neurol.
Autore/Fonte: SIGE
Autore/Fonte: AISF/SID/SIO
Autore/Fonte: ESC
Autore/Fonte: ESC
Autore/Fonte: American Stroke Association