Step‐by‐step diagnosis and management of the nocebo/drucebo effect in statin‐associated muscle symptoms patients: a position paper fromthe International Lipid Expert Panel(ILEP)
Peter E. Penson,Éric Bruckert,David Marais,Željko Reiner,Matteo Pirro,Amirhossein Sahebkar,Gani Bajraktari,Erkin М Мirrakhimov,Manfredi Rizzo,Dimitri P. Mikhailidis,Alexandros Sachinidis,Dan Gaiță,Gustavs Latkovskis,Mohsen Mazidi,Peter P. Tóth,Daniel Pella,Fahad Alnouri,Arman Postadzhiyan,Hung‐I Yeh,G.B. John Mancini,Stephan von Haehling,Maciej Banach
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.