Step‐by‐step diagnosis and management of the nocebo/drucebo effect in statin‐associated muscle symptoms patients: a position paper from <i>the International Lipid Expert Panel</i> (ILEP)

Peter E. Penson(Liverpool John Moores University), Éric Bruckert(Sorbonne Université), David Marais(University of Cape Town), Željko Reiner(University Hospital Centre Zagreb), Matteo Pirro(University of Perugia), Amirhossein Sahebkar(Mashhad University of Medical Sciences), Gani Bajraktari(Kyrgyz State Medical Academy), Erkin М Мirrakhimov(National Center of Cardiology and Internal Medicine), Manfredi Rizzo(University of South Carolina), Dimitri P. Mikhailidis(University College Hospital), Alexandros Sachinidis(Aristotle University of Thessaloniki), Dan Gaiță(Victor Babeș University of Medicine and Pharmacy Timișoara), Gustavs Latkovskis(Pauls Stradiņš Clinical University Hospital), Mohsen Mazidi(University of Oxford), Peter P. Tóth(Johns Hopkins University), Daniel Pella(University of Pavol Jozef Šafárik), Fahad Alnouri(Prince Sultan University), Arman Postadzhiyan(Medical University of Sofia), Hung‐I Yeh(Mackay Medical University), G.B. John Mancini(Medical University of Sofia), Stephan von Haehling(German Centre for Cardiovascular Research), Maciej Banach(Medical University of Lodz), International Lipid Expert Panel (ILEP)
Journal of Cachexia Sarcopenia and Muscle
March 10, 2022
Cited by 79Open Access
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Abstract

Statin intolerance is a clinical syndrome whereby adverse effects (AEs) associated with statin therapy [most commonly statin-associated muscle symptoms (SAMS)] result in the discontinuation of therapy and consequently increase the risk of adverse cardiovascular outcomes. However, complete statin intolerance occurs in only a small minority of treated patients (estimated prevalence of only 3-5%). Many perceived AEs are misattributed (e.g. physical musculoskeletal injury and inflammatory myopathies), and subjective symptoms occur as a result of the fact that patients expect them to do so when taking medicines (the nocebo/drucebo effect)-what might be truth even for over 50% of all patients with muscle weakness/pain. Clear guidance is necessary to enable the optimal management of plasma in real-world clinical practice in patients who experience subjective AEs. In this Position Paper of the International Lipid Expert Panel (ILEP), we present a step-by-step patient-centred approach to the identification and management of SAMS with a particular focus on strategies to prevent and manage the nocebo/drucebo effect and to improve long-term compliance with lipid-lowering therapy.


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