Are Statins Safe to Treat Heart Disease?

“The debate over the harms and benefits of statins is not over. Journals, journalists, clinicians, and researchers could help people to grasp the uncertainty that still exists and to attack it.”

The authors of a study warn that “the benefits of statin therapy have been underestimated, and the harms exaggerated, because of a failure to acknowledge properly both the wealth of evidence from randomised trials and the limitations of other types of studies.” Credit: evanblaser/Flickr, CC BY 2.0

On September 8, 2016, the journal Lancet published a timely review on statin therapy, authored by nine specialists from Australia, England, Canada, Scotland and USA. For the past few years, controversies on statin therapy have found extensive coverage in mainstream newspapers, medical blogs and other contemporary publications. The intensity of the arguments among specialists was truly bewildering

Statins are drugs useful to lower cholesterol in blood. Presence of high levels of cholesterol is a major health problem. Specialists have identified the importance of cholesterol in blood.

In this context, the claim of The Lancet that the just published review is “to help doctors, patients and public make informed decisions about the use of statins” is justified.

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Is it going to the final word? It is unlikely, if we review the developments in the specialty over the past few years.

In the carefully worded review, the authors “warn that the benefits of statin therapy have been underestimated, and the harms exaggerated, because of a failure to acknowledge properly both the wealth of evidence from randomised trials and the limitations of other types of studies.”

The review arrives at a set of straight forward, easily understandable conclusions. Thus:

“Lowering cholesterol by 2 mmol/L with an effective low-cost statin therapy (e.g. atorvastatin 40 mg daily, which costs about £2 per month in the UK) for five years in 10,000 patients would: