High
cholesterol levels among U.S. adults declining: CDC report
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[October 26, 2017] By
Bill Berkrot
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The prevalence of U.S.
adults with high cholesterol declined significantly between 1999-2000
and 2015-2016, achieving a long-term public health goal, according to
data released on Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention's National Center for Health Statistics.
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The latest survey found that overall 12.4 percent of adults aged 20
and over had high total cholesterol compared with 18.3 percent in
1999-2000. High total cholesterol was defined as above 240 mg/dl in
the blood.
High cholesterol is a key risk factor for heart disease, which
remains the No. 1 killer in the United States despite dramatic
declines in overall numbers in recent decades.
To improve the health of the U.S. population, a program called
Healthy People 2020 included a goal of reducing the proportion of
adults with high total cholesterol to less than 13.5 percent. Both
men and women aged 20 and over met that goal.
The surveys over two-year periods provide a snapshot of health of
the U.S. population, Margaret Carroll, lead author of the latest
report explained. "It's good news that total cholesterol is going
down."
Each survey targets a sample of about 5,000 people from counties
across the country.
While the report does not explain the positive trend, one answer
seemed obvious to Dr. Steven Nissen, chief of cardiology at
Cleveland Clinic who was not involved with the CDC report.
"The use of statins has skyrocketed," said Nissen, referring to
widely used cholesterol-lowering medicines such as Pfizer Inc's
Lipitor, AstraZeneca's Crestor and their generic counterparts that
also significantly reduce heart attacks. "My guess is the vast
majority of this difference is due to the use of statins."
Public health measures such as bans on trans-fat foods, as well as
individual decisions to alter diet and exercise has also likely
helped, Nissen said.
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The CDC report also found the prevalence of Americans with levels of
"good" HDL considered too low fell from 22.2 percent in 1999-2000 to
18.4 percent as of last year. Levels of HDL are recommended to be at
40 mg/dl or above.
However, raising HDL via medicines, such as niacin, has never shown
a correlation with better health outcomes.
The NCHS plans to release data on levels of "bad" LDL cholesterol,
the prime target of statins, and triglycerides - both components of
total cholesterol - later, Carroll said.
In 2015-2016, men aged 40-59 had significantly higher rates of high
total cholesterol (16.5 percent) than those aged 20-39 (9.1 percent)
or those 60 and over (6.9 percent).
Among women, the 20-39 age range had far lower rates at 6.7 percent,
while more than 17 percent had high total cholesterol in the other
two age groups.
Race appeared to make no significant difference in high cholesterol
rates among men, but Hispanic women had lower rates than
non-Hispanic white women - 9 percent versus 14.8 percent - with
non-Hispanic blacks and Asians in the middle at 10.3 percent each.
(Reporting by Bill Berkrot; Editing by Richard Chang)
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