| All adult patient populations: those without a history of cardiovascular events, and those with. Baseline risk is something like ~35% for men, and ~20% women. Time point is from 50 to 75 years of age. Statins -- at most -- reduce your absolute risk from 35% to 33% (for men) and from 20% to 18% (for women). If you do not smoke, your absolute risk drops by ~7%, from 35% to 28%. If you're diabetic, your risk jumps an absolute ~30% to 65%. See: https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/full/10.1161/circulationaha.... (table 2 & table 3). --- Your article has this caveat: "Virtually all of the major statin studies were paid for and conducted by their respective pharmaceutical company. A long history of misrepresentation of data and occasionally fraudulent reporting of data suggests that these results are often much more optimistic than subsequent data produced by researchers and parties that do not have a financial stake in the results." Ignoring that, 2% (absolute) of the population on statins develop diabetes and 10% (absolute) develop muscle pain/rhabdo (in one experiment). This is also ignoring all of the serious adverse events from gen-1 and gen-2 statins. As a whole, they on average achieve a 1.2% reduction in absolute mortality (all-cause or only from heart disease?). While I have just read it, I'm going to discount [1], because of what's inside "Declaration of interests." And on principle, I'm not going to read [2], unless you quote the relevant sections (as is good form when referencing). |
2% diabetes is overstated as in link 1 except you discount it because of declared disclosures despite the fact that it’s one of the most highly cited papers on the subject in the last 10 years and the study was a review.
You also discount a well respected guideline on lipids out of principle.
Then you cite unrelated data from 2006 as a good reference for an unknown reason?
Finally, you disregard the opinions of a Cochrane review in an unrelated patient population which directly contradicts your misinterpretation of the data (clearly have no concept of NNT/NNH as you just make capricious interpretations of ARR) yet cite yourself as more of an expert than the Cochrane authors.
For what it’s worth since you focus on conflicts it’s to my financial benefit if you don’t take your statins (and pharma pays me nothing), so by all means skip the statin at your own risk.
This really doesn’t seem like an open discussion so I’ll stop engaging. But you’re spreading misinformation for any reader, statins save lives.