From the Journals

The best statins to lower non-HDL cholesterol in diabetes?


 

Non-HDL cholesterol a better marker?

For Robert Rosenson, MD, director of metabolism and lipids at Mount Sinai Health System and professor of medicine and cardiology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, non-HDL cholesterol is becoming an important marker of risk for several reasons.

“The focus on LDL cholesterol has been due to the causal relationship of LDL with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, but in the last few decades, non-HDL has emerged because more people are overweight, have insulin resistance, and have diabetes,” Dr. Rosenson told this news organization. “In those situations, the LDL cholesterol underrepresents the risk of the LDL particles. With insulin resistance, the particles become more triglycerides and less cholesterol, so on a per-particle basis, you need to get more LDL particles to get to a certain LDL cholesterol concentration.”

Non-HDL cholesterol testing does not require fasting, another advantage of using it to monitor cholesterol, he added.

What is often forgotten is that moderate- to high-intensity statins have very good triglyceride-lowering effects, Dr. Rosenson said.

“This article highlights that, by using higher doses, you get more triglyceride-lowering. Hopefully, this will get practitioners to recognize that non-HDL cholesterol is a better predictor of risk in people with diabetes,” he said.

The study was funded by the National Institute for Health Research. Dr. Hodkinson, Dr. Rosenson, and Dr. Deedwania report no relevant financial relationships.

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

Pages

Recommended Reading

New test for Lp(a) allows more accurate LDL-cholesterol results
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Intermittent fasting good for weight loss, at least short term
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Pfizer recalls BP drugs because of potential carcinogen
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Sleep deprivation sends fat to the belly
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Coffee drinking may cut heart disease risk, prolong survival
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Avocados linked to lower cardiovascular risk
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
SCORED: Sotagliflozin shows robust MACE benefit
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Supermarket diet advice improves DASH adherence: SuperWIN
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Novel tool could calculate CVD risk in T2DM
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
AHA statement addresses CVD risk in NAFLD
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management