On 2014 Mar 04, David Keller commented:
The quantum treatment discontinuity at 190 mg/dL lacks biological plausibility
The case of the 57-year-old white man in Table 2 illustrates a peculiar aspect of the new lipid treatment guidelines: his recommended treatment is high-intensity statin therapy if his LDL is greater than or equal to 190 mg/dL, but if his LDL is below 190 mg/dL, then no treatment is recommended. It seems odd that an LDL of 189 mg/dL is not considered high enough to warrant any statin therapy at all, but if his LDL is 1 point higher, it triggers the need for maximum-dose statin therapy. The true variation of cardiovascular risk with LDL seems unlikely to exhibit this sort of quantum jump discontinuity. Cardiovascular risk seems more likely to be a smooth, continuous and monotonically increasing function of LDL, and amelioration of this risk would therefore justify a range of statin doses, starting with low dose statins to treat mild LDL elevations, medium dose statins to treat moderate LDL elevations, and high dose statins to treat severely elevated LDL levels of 190 mg/dL or higher. This is how clinicians have historically treated patients for hyperlipidemia. If the data does not exist to support this range of treatments, it may be because mild and moderate LDL elevations do not cause enough adverse events fast enough to generate statistically significant results over the course of a clinical trial for this category of patient. Guideline-issuing organizations should revisit evidence-based guidelines which include recommendations that lack biological plausibility. Since biological variables are generally continuous, while data points from major clinical trials are discrete, interpolation and curve-fitting should be permissible in evidence-based guidelines, in order to avoid the kind of quantum discontinuity encountered in this case.
To facilitate discussion, I respectfully request the person who found this comment "not helpful" to state their reason
This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.