Cancer history was not independently associated with statin initiation by primary care providers (OR 2.98) after adjusting for coronary artery calcium score and other cardiovascular risk factors.
Cross-Sectional (n=206)
Yes
Does a history of cancer affect the rate of statin initiation by primary care providers in intermediate-risk patients following coronary artery calcium scoring?
Statin prescribing by primary care providers following CACS testing is aligned with guidelines and not influenced by cancer history, though undertreatment remains common in patients with detectable coronary calcium.
Effect estimate: OR 2.98 (95% CI 0.86-11.7)
Absolute Event Rate: 54% vs 69%
p-value: p=0.098
Cancer survivors are at higher risk of developing heart disease, but it is unclear whether they receive adequate preventive care. This study aimed to compare the statin initiation rates between cancer survivors and non-cancer controls. Cancer survivors and similar statin-naïve controls were recruited from the community. Intermediate risk participants, based on their conventional cardiovascular risk factors, were referred for coronary artery calcium score (CACS). This result was relayed to participants’ primary care provider (PCP), who determined therapy. Multivariable logistic regression models were constructed to identify the associations between cancer history and statin initiation by PCP. This study compared management of 97 cancer survivors (median age 67 64–70 years, 84.5% female) and 109 non-cancer controls (median age 64 60–67 years, 36.7% female). The median CACS for survivors and controls were 62 16–124 and 144 28–554 followed by the overall statin prescription rates of 54% and 69%, respectively. Multivariable logistic regression showed that cancer history was not associated with statin initiation by PCP after adjustment for CACS, age, sex and other cardiovascular risk factors. Statin prescribing by primary care providers was generally aligned with guideline recommendations and did not differ substantially by cancer history. However, many individuals with any detectable coronary calcium (CACS > 0) remained untreated, despite this being a clear marker of elevated risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. These findings suggest that undertreatment may not be driven by clinical inertia alone, underscoring the need to explore alternative barriers to preventive care in this vulnerable population.
Soh et al. (Mon,) conducted a cross-sectional in Asymptomatic coronary atherosclerosis (n=206). Statin initiation vs. Non-cancer controls was evaluated on Statin initiation by primary care provider (OR 2.98, 95% CI 0.86-11.7, p=0.098). Cancer history was not independently associated with statin initiation by primary care providers (OR 2.98) after adjusting for coronary artery calcium score and other cardiovascular risk factors.
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