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A new study suggests calcium scores may help physicians as they navigate a wide cardiac screening guideline gap over recommendations about statin therapy in African Americans.

 

 

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A new study suggests calcium scores may help physicians as they navigate a wide cardiac screening guideline gap over recommendations about statin therapy in African Americans.

 

 

 

A new study suggests calcium scores may help physicians as they navigate a wide cardiac screening guideline gap over recommendations about statin therapy in African Americans.

 

 

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Key clinical point: Cardiac screening guidelines diverge on statin-eligible African Americans, but calcium levels can provide treatment insight.

Major finding: U.S. Preventive Services Task Force guidelines did not recommend statins in 25.7% of 1,404 African Americans who were deemed statin eligible by American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines.

Data source: Prospective, community-based study of 2,812 African American subjects in Mississippi – aged 40-75 years, mean age 55, 65.3% female, mean body mass index 31.6 kg/m2 – tracked for median of 10 years; 1,743 underwent computed tomography.

Disclosures: The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities funded the study. One author reported funding from a National Institutes of Health grant. The others had no disclosures.