The April One issue of American Family Physician
inaugurates a new editorial feature that presents two opposing views on a
controversial clinical topic and asks readers to post comments online. In this
issue, Dr. Robert Gauer argues that because atherosclerosis begins in
childhood, using cholesterol-lowering drugs in children with hyperlipidemia is
essential to prevent coronary events and cardiovascular mortality in later
life. On the other hand, Dr. Michael LeFevre contends that since only 40 to 55
percent of children with elevated cholesterol levels will have persistent
hyperlipidemia as adults, and the potential benefits and harms of decades of
drug therapy are unknown, physicians should demand a high "evidence
bar" for instituting screening and treatment.
Since hyperlipidemia causes no symptoms, these views reflect
in large part the dueling guidelines of the American Academy of Pediatrics
(AAP) and the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) on lipid screening
in children. While the AAP recommends that screening for hyperlipidemia begin
at age 2 in children with a family history of hyperlipidemia, premature
cardiovascular disease, or other risk factors, the USPSTF found insufficient
evidence to recommend for or against screening in any group of children.
This leaves family physicians and other
clinicians who care for children with an important clinical dilemma. Should
they act now based on disease-oriented evidence and extrapolation from studies
of primary prevention of cardiovascular disease in adults, or should they
instead wait for patient-oriented evidence from long-term followup studies of
children with elevated lipid levels? Which approach do you take in your
practice, and why? You are welcome to post comments here or on AFP's Facebookpage; AAFP members can also post comments on the AFP web page. We look forward
to the discussion!
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