krsct
GLP-1 Apprentice

Been on GLP-1 for almost 3 years. Lost 1/4 of body weight in 8 months and maintenance since then. Took a while but my doctor stopped my statins today. Never thought it would happen. It took a while but another great NSV.


That is awesome, keep us posted to see if the cholesterol numbers creep back up.krsct said:Been on GLP-1 for almost 3 years. Lost 1/4 of body weight in 8 months and maintenance since then. Took a while but my doctor stopped my statins today. Never thought it would happen. It took a while but another great NSV.

staffn1 said:Congrats. What cholesterol numbers did you hit? The new



FAREFFINOUTkrsct said:Been on GLP-1 for almost 3 years. Lost 1/4 of body weight in 8 months and maintenance since then. Took a while but my doctor stopped my statins today. Never thought it would happen. It took a while but another great NSV.

Agree with this, coronary calcium score is a very good way to determine if statins are needed or not, and is especially useful where calculated risk based on family history, blood pressure , lipids, blood sugar, smoking etc is intermediate, and it will still show changes if those numbers are improved by weight loss, and treatment is an extremely good idea if CCS is high even if the other numbers are much improved, as it shows very strong correlations with long term risk, possibly better than any other test including angiography. You could definitely argue than those over 40 or 50 who were or are obese and had evidence of metabolic syndrome should get this checked, even after weight loss. Not covered by medicare in Aus but costs $250 aud and gives very useful information and does not normally ever need to be repeated.Calm Logic said:It's like $100 here for a coronary CT calcium scan (CAC), if insurance doesn't pay.
It takes about three to five years for the plaque to calcify (enough to be detected on a scan). So a more expensive option is Cardiac CT Angiography (CCTA), which tells you both the past (calcified) and the present (soft plaque).
But most people who are paying out of pocket just do the calcium scan.
Calcium score is a lagging indicator ofr primary prevention . By the time calcium shows up on a scan, you're already well on your way to develop cvd.lessthanhalf said:Agree with this, coronary calcium score is a very good way to determine if statins are needed or not, and is especially useful where calculated risk based on family history, blood pressure , lipids, blood sugar, smoking etc is intermediate, and it will still show changes if those numbers are improved by weight loss, and treatment is an extremely good idea if CCS is high even if the other numbers are much improved, as it shows very strong correlations with long term risk, possibly better than any other test including angiography. You could definitely argue than those over 40 or 50 who were or are obese and had evidence of metabolic syndrome should get this checked, even after weight loss. Not covered by medicare in Aus but costs $250 aud and gives very useful information and does not normally ever need to be repeated.

krsct said:Been on GLP-1 for almost 3 years. Lost 1/4 of body weight in 8 months and maintenance since then. Took a while but my doctor stopped my statins today. Never thought it would happen. It took a while but another great NSV.

Yes but that is the point. It is not practical or economic to treat every single person with statins. Treatment is decided by an estimate of absolute risk of MACE or major atherosclerotic cardiovascular events over the next 10 years. Biggest risk by far is age. Then the usual ones family history, smoking, diabetes, blood pressure and lipids. Calculations based on those risk factors are the standard method. Coronary calcium score is an alternate way of assessing risk and is very accurate at predicting future risk, which makes it an excellent tool for deciding if primary prevention is warranted or not.Habibibi said:Calcium score is a lagging indicator ofr primary prevention . By the time calcium shows up on a scan, you're already well on your way to develop cvd.

Exactly. It was a self-chosen, self-pay CT calcium scan last August that revealed an 80% occlusion of my LCX and a stent in December that decreased that 80% to 0%. I sent the CAC results to my PCP and she put me on rosuvastatin the same day. LDL went from 141 to 54 between August and December. It was discovered that occlusion is the result of atheriosclerosis.lessthanhalf said:Agree with this, coronary calcium score is a very good way to determine if statins are needed or not, and is especially useful where calculated risk based on family history, blood pressure , lipids, blood sugar, smoking etc is intermediate, and it will still show changes if those numbers are improved by weight loss, and treatment is an extremely good idea if CCS is high even if the other numbers are much improved, as it shows very strong correlations with long term risk, possibly better than any other test


Excellent point. I recently had my calcium CT and guess what? Despite being on a statin for 20 years and keeping my my cholesterol well below even borderline, my calcium score is off the charts. So now I have a cardiologist! Good news? The calcium is in my arterial walls, stabilizing the whole thing. No narrowing. Aced stress test. Hit the gym every day. Only have to see the cardiologist once a year. My LDL is 40 (yes still on a statin, different one at higher strength), total cholesterol <100.Habibibi said:Calcium score is a lagging indicator ofr primary prevention . By the time calcium shows up on a scan, you're already well on your way to develop cvd.

Completely agree with this, but there is a greater implication here too. It's very likely OP was put on a statin without evaluating these factors to begin with and purely based on one or two LDL-C (estimated) values from a basic lipid panel alone, as is commonly done in the US and a rather disappointing state of affairs.Jfrick11 said:I think what’s missing here is that LDL alone doesn’t define cardiovascular risk.
The more complete question is: what is this person’s actual risk right now?
That usually involves ApoB, Lp(a), inflammation (hs-CRP), and sometimes CAC.... not just LDL.
So LDL of 90 and stopping statins could be reasonable… or premature.
It depends on factors we’re not seeing discussed: ApoB, LDL-P, Lp(a), inflammation, family history, insulin resistance, CAC, etc.
Without that, it feels like an incomplete picture