Commentary

Is it time to stop treating high triglycerides?


 

The final nail in the coffin may very well be the aforementioned PROMINENT trial. The new agent, pemafibrate, fared no better than its predecessor fenofibrate. Pemafibrate had no impact on the study’s primary composite outcome of nonfatal MI, stroke, coronary revascularization, or cardiovascular death despite being very effective at lowering triglycerides (by more than 25%). Patients treated with pemafibrate had increased LDL-C and apoB compared with the placebo group. When you realize that, the results of the study are not very surprising.

Some point to the results of REDUCE-IT as proof that triglycerides are still a valid target for pharmacotherapy. The debate on whether REDUCE-IT tested a good drug or a bad placebo is one for another day. The salient point for today is that the benefits of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) were seen regardless of either baseline or final triglyceride level. EPA may lower cardiac risk, but there is no widespread consensus that it does so by lowering triglycerides. There may be other mechanisms at work.

You could still argue that high triglycerides have value as a risk prediction tool even if their role as a target for drug therapy is questionable. There was a time when medications to lower triglycerides had a benefit. But this is the post-statin era, and that time has passed.

If you see patients with high triglycerides, treating them with triglyceride-lowering medication probably isn’t going to reduce their cardiovascular risk. Dietary interventions, encouraging exercise, and reducing alcohol consumption are better options. Not only will they lead to lower cholesterol levels, but they’ll lower cardiovascular risk, too.

Dr. Labos is a cardiologist at Hôpital Notre-Dame, Montreal, with a degree in epidemiology. He has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. He spends most of his time doing things that he doesn’t get paid for, like research, teaching, and podcasting. Occasionally he finds time to practice cardiology to pay the rent. He realizes that half of his research findings will be disproved in 5 years; he just doesn’t know which half. He is a regular contributor to the Montreal Gazette, CJAD radio, and CTV television in Montreal and is host of the award-winning podcast The Body of Evidence. The Body of Evidence.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

High CV risk factor burden in young adults a ‘smoldering’ crisis
MDedge Family Medicine
Keto/paleo diets ‘lower quality than others,’ and bad for planet
MDedge Family Medicine
Heart-healthy actions promote longer, disease-free life
MDedge Family Medicine
‘Keto-like’ diet linked to doubling of heart disease risk
MDedge Family Medicine
Causal link found between childhood obesity and adult-onset diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine
What’s it like to take Ozempic? A doctor’s own story
MDedge Family Medicine
Mediterranean diet linked to 24% reduction in CVD risk in women
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA expands evinacumab approval to younger kids with HoFH
MDedge Family Medicine
Disparities in statin use persist in high-risk Americans
MDedge Family Medicine
One or two high-step days may reduce mortality risks
MDedge Family Medicine