Cholesterol-lowering
drugs don’t offset healthy choices
Newswise — Within the
medical field, it is often assumed that patients
view cholesterol-lowering medications (or
statins) as a license to eat whatever they like
-- they figure their medication has them
covered, so a steak here and there won’t hurt.
However, a study published in the August issue
of Mayo Clinic Proceedings finds that such
patients don’t tend to adopt unhealthy diets
when prescribed statins.
Researchers also found that
some patients were placed on
cholesterol-lowering drugs before they’d made a
good faith effort at improving their lifestyle
to better their health. And some said they would
have preferred starting with lifestyle
alterations rather than medication.
Devin Mann, M.D., lead
author of the article on statin use, says
physicians should reconsider how they’re
treating patients who seek preventive care for
cardiovascular disease, namely by giving up
their long-held assumptions about them.
“Physicians aren’t good at
predicting patient behavior, so they should seek
to form a partnership of trust with patients
based on mutual respect and optimal
communication,” says Dr. Mann from Mount Sinai
School of Medicine.
This study involved 71
patients who had been prescribed statins for
the primary prevention of cardiovascular
disease. Patients were interviewed at the
time of prescription and three and six
months later, when no significant change in
saturated fat intake was noted.
Other authors of the report
were John Allegrante, Ph.D., of Columbia
University, New York; Sundar Natarajan, M.D., of
New York University School of Medicine; Victor
Montori, M.D., of Mayo Clinic; Ethan Halm, M.D.,
of Mount Sinai, New York; and Mary Charlson,
M.D., of Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.
A peer-review journal, Mayo
Clinic Proceedings publishes original articles,
reviews and editorials dealing with clinical and
laboratory medicine, clinical research, basic
science research and clinical epidemiology. Mayo
Clinic Proceedings is published monthly by Mayo
Foundation for Medical Education and Research as
part of its commitment to the medical education
of physicians. The journal has been published
for more than 80 years and has a circulation of
130,000 nationally and internationally.