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Am Fam Physician. 2026;113(2):183-184

This clinical content conforms to AAFP criteria for CME.

Author disclosure: No relevant financial relationships.

CLINICAL QUESTION

In patients with established atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD), should oral cholesterol medications be dosed to achieve a specific low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLC) level or given as a fixed dose according to the patient's risk profile?

EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER

In patients with established ASCVD, evidence supports dosing oral cholesterol-lowering medications to achieve a specific LDL-C target, ideally less than 70 mg/dL (1.81 mmol/L), rather than treatment based solely on risk profile. (Strength of Recommendation [SOR]: A, meta-analysis and randomized controlled trials [RCTs].) A recent consensus guideline recommends fixed-dose statin therapy based on the patient's risk profile. (SOR: C, expert opinion.)

EVIDENCE SUMMARY

ASCVD

A 2010 meta-analysis of 26 RCTs (N = 169,138) examined the effectiveness of LDL-C lowering with statins. Patients were primarily from high-income regions, male, 50 to 70 years of age, and with or without ASCVD. Interventions included various high-intensity statins. Primary outcomes were cause-specific mortality, major coronary event (death or nonfatal myocardial infarction), coronary revascularization (angioplasty or bypass grafting), stroke, and new cancer diagnosis. A major vascular event was defined as the first occurrence of any major coronary event, coronary revascularization, or stroke.1

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Clinical Inquiries provides answers to questions submitted by practicing family physicians to the Family Physicians Inquiries Network (FPIN). Members of the network select questions based on their relevance to family medicine. Answers are drawn from an approved set of evidence-based resources and undergo peer review. The strength of recommendations and the level of evidence for individual studies are rated using criteria developed by the Evidence-Based Medicine Working Group (https://www.cebm.net).

The complete database of evidence-based questions and answers is copyrighted by FPIN. If interested in submitting questions or writing answers for this series, go to https://www.fpin.org or email questions@fpin.org.

Copyright © Family Physicians Inquiries Network. Used with permission.

This series is coordinated by John E. Delzell Jr., MD, MSPH, associate medical editor.

A collection of FPIN’s Clinical Inquiries published in AFP is available at https://www.aafp.org/afp/fpin.

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