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. 2020 Feb 1;5(2):217-229.
doi: 10.1001/jamacardio.2019.5173.

Reducing the Clinical and Public Health Burden of Familial Hypercholesterolemia: A Global Call to Action

Representatives of the Global Familial Hypercholesterolemia CommunityKatherine A Wilemon  1 Jasmine Patel  1 Carlos Aguilar-Salinas  2   3   4   5 Catherine D Ahmed  1 Mutaz Alkhnifsawi  6   7 Wael Almahmeed  8 Rodrigo Alonso  2   6   9   10 Khalid Al-Rasadi  6   11 Lina Badimon  12   13 Luz M Bernal  14 Martin P Bogsrud  15   16 Lynne T Braun  17 Liam Brunham  18 Alberico L Catapano  19   20 Kristyna Cillíková  21   22 Pablo Corral  2   23 Regina Cuevas  24 Joep C Defesche  25 Olivier S Descamps  22   26   27 Sarah de Ferranti  28   29 Jean-Luc Eiselé  30 Gerardo Elikir  2   31 Emanuela Folco  6   32 Tomas Freiberger  33   34 Francesco Fuggetta  22   35 Isabel M Gaspar  36 Ákos G Gesztes  22   37 Urh Grošelj  38 Ian Hamilton-Craig  39 Gabriele Hanauer-Mader  22   40 Mariko Harada-Shiba  41 Gloria Hastings  22   42 G Kees Hovingh  43 Maria C Izar  44 Allison Jamison  1 Gunnar N Karlsson  22   45 Meral Kayikçioglu  22   46   47 Sue Koob  48 Masahiro Koseki  49 Stacey Lane  1 Marcos M Lima-Martinez  2   50   51 Greizy López  52 Tania L Martinez  53 David Marais  54 Letrillart Marion  22   55 Pedro Mata  2   9   22 Inese Maurina  22   56 Diana Maxwell  22 Roopa Mehta  3   4 George A Mensah  57 André R Miserez  58   59 Dermot Neely  60   61 Stephen J Nicholls  62 Atsushi Nohara  63 Børge G Nordestgaard  64   65 Leiv Ose  66   67 Athanasios Pallidis  22   68 Jing Pang  69 Jules Payne  22   61 Amy L Peterson  70 Monica P Popescu  22   71 Raman Puri  72   73 Kausik K Ray  20   74 Ashraf Reda  75   76 Tiziana Sampietro  77   78 Raul D Santos  2   6   79 Inge Schalkers  22   80 Laura Schreier  2   81 Michael D Shapiro  1   82 Eric Sijbrands  83 Daniel Soffer  84 Claudia Stefanutti  85   86 Mario Stoll  2   87 Rody G Sy  88 Martha L Tamayo  52 Myra K Tilney  89   90 Lale Tokgözoglu  20   91 Brian Tomlinson  92 Antonio J Vallejo-Vaz  74 Alejandra Vazquez-Cárdenas  2   93   94 Patrícia Vieira de Luca  95 David S Wald  96 Gerald F Watts  69   97 Nanette K Wenger  98 Michaela Wolf  23   99 David Wood  30 Aram Zegerius  100 Thomas A Gaziano  31   101   102 Samuel S Gidding  1
Affiliations

Reducing the Clinical and Public Health Burden of Familial Hypercholesterolemia: A Global Call to Action

Representatives of the Global Familial Hypercholesterolemia Community et al. JAMA Cardiol. .

Erratum in

  • Error in Table 1.
    [No authors listed] [No authors listed] JAMA Cardiol. 2020 May 1;5(5):613. doi: 10.1001/jamacardio.2020.0344. JAMA Cardiol. 2020. PMID: 32186650 Free PMC article. No abstract available.

Abstract

Importance: Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) is an underdiagnosed and undertreated genetic disorder that leads to premature morbidity and mortality due to atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Familial hypercholesterolemia affects 1 in 200 to 250 people around the world of every race and ethnicity. The lack of general awareness of FH among the public and medical community has resulted in only 10% of the FH population being diagnosed and adequately treated. The World Health Organization recognized FH as a public health priority in 1998 during a consultation meeting in Geneva, Switzerland. The World Health Organization report highlighted 11 recommendations to address FH worldwide, from diagnosis and treatment to family screening and education. Research since the 1998 report has increased understanding and awareness of FH, particularly in specialty areas, such as cardiology and lipidology. However, in the past 20 years, there has been little progress in implementing the 11 recommendations to prevent premature atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in an entire generation of families with FH.

Observations: In 2018, the Familial Hypercholesterolemia Foundation and the World Heart Federation convened the international FH community to update the 11 recommendations. Two meetings were held: one at the 2018 FH Foundation Global Summit and the other during the 2018 World Congress of Cardiology and Cardiovascular Health. Each meeting served as a platform for the FH community to examine the original recommendations, assess the gaps, and provide commentary on the revised recommendations. The Global Call to Action on Familial Hypercholesterolemia thus represents individuals with FH, advocacy leaders, scientific experts, policy makers, and the original authors of the 1998 World Health Organization report. Attendees from 40 countries brought perspectives on FH from low-, middle-, and high-income regions. Tables listing country-specific government support for FH care, existing country-specific and international FH scientific statements and guidelines, country-specific and international FH registries, and known FH advocacy organizations around the world were created.

Conclusions and relevance: By adopting the 9 updated public policy recommendations created for this document, covering awareness; advocacy; screening, testing, and diagnosis; treatment; family-based care; registries; research; and cost and value, individual countries have the opportunity to prevent atherosclerotic heart disease in their citizens carrying a gene associated with FH and, likely, all those with severe hypercholesterolemia as well.

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