We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Characteristics of US adults with the metabolic syndrome and therapeutic implications.
- Authors
Jacobson, T. A.; Case, C. C.; Roberts, S.; Buckley, A.; Murtaugh, K. M.; Sung, J. C. Y.; Gause, D.; Varas, C.; Ballantyne, C. M.
- Abstract
The third Adult Treatment Panel (ATP III) of the National Cholesterol Education Program defines clinical criteria for diagnosis of the metabolic syndrome, which increases cardiovascular risk and is a target for therapy. We analysed the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III; 1988–94) to determine how many US adults meet these criteria and are recommended for lipid-modifying drug therapy by ATP III. NHANES III data were used to estimate the number of individuals with the metabolic syndrome and the number recommended for treatment by ATP III, based on 1990 census data. An estimated 36.3 million (23%) US adults have the metabolic syndrome. Of these, 84% met the criterion for obesity, 76% for blood pressure, 75% for HDL-C, 74% for triglycerides and 41% for glucose. Most (54%) are in the higher risk categories of ATP III, yet only 39% overall are recommended for drug therapy by ATP III cutpoints; of these, most will achieve LDL-C targets with reductions of 35–40%. Of the 15.3 million individuals with the metabolic syndrome and triglycerides ≥2.26 mmol/l (200 mg/dl), non-HDL-C is above ATP III recommendations in 11.6 million. Of the large number of Americans with the metabolic syndrome, ATP III recommends drug therapy for only a minority, because LDL-C typically is not substantially elevated. Instead, high triglycerides and low HDL-C are more common; clinical trial data are needed to determine whether optimal therapy should focus on reductions in LDL-C or on comprehensive improvements to the lipid profile.
- Subjects
UNITED States; DRUG therapy; THERAPEUTICS; TRIGLYCERIDES; METABOLIC disorders; BLOOD pressure; CLINICAL trials
- Publication
Diabetes, Obesity & Metabolism, 2004, Vol 6, Issue 5, p353
- ISSN
1462-8902
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1462-8902.2004.00354.x