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Recommendations Needed for Cholesterol Screening for Kids

by Julia Samuel on Aug 10 2016 3:11 PM

Recommendations Needed for Cholesterol Screening for Kids
The volunteer panel known as the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) has maintained the same stance it last took in 2007 that ihere is not enough evidence to support widespread screening of children for high cholesterol.
"The //current evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of screening for lipid disorders in children and adolescents younger than 20 years," said the USPSTF, which makes recommendations on screenings, counseling services and preventative medications.

The AHA and the National Lipid Association however do urge screening for unusually high cholesterol in kids -- particularly those with a family history of heart disease -- as a way to prevent damage from hardened arteries, said the report in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).

Those groups support cholesterol screening in children and adolescents as a strategy for identifying a genetic disorder that occurs in up to 1 of every 250 individuals in the United States, known as familial hypercholesterolemia.

An accompanying editorial in JAMA said that although there is mounting evidence in favor of childhood interventions for high cholesterol, "there may be harms associated with screening for dyslipidemia, as the USPSTF rightly points out."

These may include overdiagnosis, higher costs and anxiety for the family, and "many youths with an isolated elevation in lipids will not develop early atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease," wrote Elaine Urbina of the Cincinnati Children's Hospital and Sarah de Ferranti of Boston Children's Hospital.

The doctors said long-term, randomized clinical trials are needed to better evaluate the benefits, harms and cost-effectiveness of various screening and treatment approaches.

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In the meantime, the decision whether to screen or not remains largely up to individual doctors.

The USPSTF's review did find "adequate evidence" from short-term trials amounting to two years or less that medications like statins could lead to substantial reductions in cholesterol among children who inherit excess levels.

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But the panel did not find enough evidence to show whether or not medical interventions in youth could lead "directly to a reduced incidence of premature cardiovascular disease."

Source-AFP


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