
High-risk patients were defined as those with CHD or a CHD risk equivalent (clinical CHD, diabetes, symptomatic carotid artery disease, peripheral arterial disease, abdominal aortic aneurysm)
A retrospective analysis of high-risk patients with dyslipidemia on statin monotherapy (n=265,488) from a large-scale national electronic medical records database1
Data Analysis: A retrospective, observational, cross-sectional analysis conducted using electronic medical records (EMR) data provided by GE Healthcare’s Medical Quality Improvement Consortium database of patient records collected from January 2003 to September 2010. As of September 2010, this database captured approximately 700,000 patients age 18 years and older with dyslipidemia [defined as those who were prescribed a cholesterol medication and had all 3 lipid values recorded (LDL-C, HDL-C, and TG)]. Low HDL-C was defined as <40 mg/dL in men and <50 mg/dL in women. Normal HDL-C was defined as >40 mg/dL in men and >50 mg/dL in women. Elevated TG was defined as ≥200 mg/dL and normal TG was defined as <200 mg/dL.
Limitations: Sociodemographic, cultural, and other factors were beyond the scope of this study; use of lipid data from a single visit; unknown if TG levels were collected during a “fasting” state; EMR data captured prescribed therapy, not necessarily what was dispensed.
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Reference:
1. Data on file, Abbott Laboratories.