Statins’ health benefits far outweigh side-effects, experts say, warning of scaremongering
The heart-protecting benefits of anti-cholesterol statins far outnumber the side-effects, a scientific review has concluded, blaming shoddy research for scaring people and putting lives at risk.
Much of the evidence for statins’ bad rap came from trials whose very design did not allow them to draw any conclusions, said the authors of the review seeking to “help doctors, patients and the public make informed decisions.”
Their own analysis, the team wrote, showed that statins prevented many more heart attacks and strokes than they caused muscle problems or diabetes.
“We’ve had an underestimation of the benefits and a massive overestimation of the harms,” said Rory Collins of the University of Oxford’s Nuffield Department of Population Health, who co-authored the review published in The Lancet on Friday.
“Consequently there is a serious cost to public health from making misleading claims about high side-effect rates that inappropriately dissuade people from taking statin therapy despite the proven benefits.”