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Blood Cholesterol

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16 Diagnosis Table 5. Checklist for Clinician–Patient Shared Decision- Making for Initiating Therapy Checklist Item Recommendation Possible Management Strategy Potential net clinical benefit of pharmacotherapy • Recommend statins as first-line therapy. • Consider the combination of statin and nonstatin therapy in selected patients. • Discuss potential risk reduction from lipid-lowering therapy. • Discuss the potential for adverse effects or drug-drug interactions. Cost considerations • Discuss potential out-of-pocket cost of therapy to the patient (e.g., insurance plan coverage, tier level, copayment). Shared decision-making • Encourage the patient to verbalize what was heard (e.g., patient's personal ASCVD risk, available options, and risks/benefits). • Invite the patient to ask questions, express values and preferences, and state ability to adhere to lifestyle changes and medications. • Refer patients to trustworthy materials to aid in their understanding of issues regarding risk decisions. • Collaborate with the patient to determine therapy and follow-up plan. a ASCVD Risk Predictor Plus is available at: http://tools.acc.org/ASCVD-Risk-Estimator-Plus Table 6. Selected Examples of Candidates for CAC Measurement Who Might Benefit From Knowing Their CAC Score Is Zero • Patients reluctant to initiate statin therapy who wish to understand their risk and potential for benefit more precisely • Patients concerned about need to reinstitute statin therapy after discontinuation for statin-associated symptoms • Older patients (men, 55–80 y of age; women, 60–80 y of age) with low burden of risk factors who question whether they would benefit from statin therapy • Middle-aged adults (40-55 y of age) with PCE-calculated 10-year risk of ASCVD 5% to <7.5% with factors that increase their ASCVD risk, although they are in a borderline risk group Caveats: If patient is intermediate risk and if a risk decision is uncertain and a CAC score is performed, it is reasonable to withhold statin therapy unless higher risk conditions such as cigarette smoking, family history of premature ASCVD, or diabetes mellitus are present, and to reassess CAC score in 5–10 years. Moreover, if CAC is recommended, it should be performed in facilities that have current technolog y that delivers the lowest radiation possible.

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