domingo, 13 de noviembre de 2016

What Gets Measured Gets Done: Public Health Progress in Familial Hypercholesterolemia

What Gets Measured Gets Done: Public Health Progress in Familial Hypercholesterolemia | Genomics and Health Impact Blog | Blogs | CDC
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What Gets Measured Gets Done: Public Health Progress in Familial Hypercholesterolemia

Posted on  by Joshua Knowles MD, guest blogger, Stanford University School of Medicine and Muin J. Khoury MD, PhD, Office of Public Health Genomics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia
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Just 4 years ago, one of us (MJK) co-chaired the Familial Hypercholesterolemia (FH) Foundation’s first FH Global SummitAwareness to Action held in Annapolis, Maryland. The Summit brought together people from academia, government, the private sector, clinicians, as well as patients with the ambitious goals of raising awareness of FH, identifying key knowledge gaps, and developing tangible solutions to address these gaps. A product of the Summit was a paper entitled, Reducing the burden of disease and death from familial hypercholesterolemia: A call to action. The action plan identified a number of solutions largely centered on the mantra of “what is measured gets done.” The plan included:
  1. Creation and adoption of a simplified case definition (in addition to formal diagnostic criteria) to help identify potential FH patients, thereby triggering appropriate work-up and treatment.
  2. Publication of U.S. based scientific statement for FH.
  3. Adoption of an FH-specific ICD-10 code. (ICD-9 codes for dyslipidemia, such as code 272.0, are not specific for FH and are usually applied to individuals with “garden variety” LDL-C elevations.) An ICD-10 code specifically applied to FH will allow optimal treatment for individuals with FH, help with screening of family members, and increase the ability to track FH patients through electronic health record searches based on ICD-10 codes.
  4. Establishment of a national FH patient registry. Lack of an actively enrolling patient registry has impeded the ability to collect contemporary data on FH in the United States.
In October 2016, the FH Foundation held their fourth annual FH Global SummitTranslational Medicine in FH, co-chaired by Drs. Dan Rader from the University of Pennsylvania and Børge G. Nordestgaard from Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark. Drs. Michael Brown and Joseph Goldstein, who won the Nobel Prize in 1985 for their work on cholesterol metabolism, highlighted the summit with their keynote address. The summit’s variety of talks ranged from basic mechanisms of disease and new therapies to cholesterol guidelines to public health aspects.
The summit talks reminded us of how the actions of many groups working together caused so much progress on FH in such a short period of time. All four of the areas identified above have been addressed!
In 2015, The Agenda for Familial Hypercholesterolemia: A Scientific Statement from the American Heart Association was published. This report discussed the pathogenesis and natural history of FH and proposed a simplified case definition and treatment strategies, including the necessity of family-based cascade screening.
On October 1, 2016, FH-specific ICD-10 codes were adopted for both a diagnosis of FH (code E78.01) as well as a family history of FH (code Z83.42). These codes were approved, based on a 3-year application process initiated by the FH Foundation, soon after the initial FH Global Summit. Of course, the next step for success will be proper adoption and utilization of these codes by healthcare providers and health systems.
Finally, the FH Foundation launched clinical site enrollment in a national patient registry in 2014. The CASCADE FH ™ Registry now contains data on about 4,000 individuals with FH. An initial 2016 publication highlighted the fact that individuals with FH are, on average, identified in their mid-40s, unfortunately often after a sentinel cardiovascular event. Furthermore, despite receiving care at leading lipid clinics around the country, many have LDL-cholesterol levels that are not optimally controlled.
Identifying and treating individuals with FH presents a real opportunity for heart disease prevention, an important public health goal. While much remains to be done, especially regarding increased clinical and public health efforts at identifying barriers to family-based cascade screening efforts, it is clear that the landscape for FH patients is slowly changing.
Posted on  by Joshua Knowles MD, guest blogger, Stanford University School of Medicine and Muin J. Khoury MD, PhD, Office of Public Health Genomics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia
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