Practice Alert

USPSTF scales back approach to lipid screening for women

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No need to look at triglycerides initially

The task force recommends screening with a fasting or nonfasting serum sample for total cholesterol and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. The task force does not recommend including a triglyceride level because there is mixed and inclusive evidence that triglyceride levels are independently associated with CHD risk and scant evidence that treating isolated elevated triglyceride levels reduces the occurrence of CHD events. This approach also conflicts with other organizations that recommend screening with fasting lipid profiles that include a triglyceride level.

The task force states that an abnormal initial screen should be confirmed by a repeat test and, if confirmed, a fasting lipid panel should be obtained. Wide adoption of the task force recommendations would result in considerable savings in cost and patient inconvenience by avoiding complete fasting lipid panels as the initial screen.

The optimal frequency of screening is not established and the task force states that every 5 years is reasonable, although more frequent testing might be considered for those with high normal values, and less frequent intervals for those with optimal cholesterol levels and healthy lifestyles.

Treatment: Look beyond lifestyle

The screening recommendations are accompanied by a discussion of clinical considerations and a description of an approach to treatment for those with lipid disorders. The main point the task force makes is that all CHD risks should be addressed, and that lifestyle changes alone rarely reduce elevated cholesterol to an optimal level. (For more on the treatment of hyperlipidemia, see the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute’s Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults [Adult Treatment Panel III] at http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/cholesterol/index.htm.)

Time to rethink conventional opinion

The updated task force recommendations are a reminder that many widely used guidelines, including those on the prevention of CHD, are based on a lack of high-level evidence. Thus, it is not surprising that a rigorously evidence-based analysis, as preformed by the USPSTF, will frequently result in recommendations that are at variance with common practice and conventional opinion.

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