BMJ 2004;328:385-386 (14 February), doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7436.385
Paper
Variations and increase in use of statins across Europe: data from administrative databases
Tom Walley, professor of clinical pharmacology1,
Pietro Folino-Gallo, senior lecturer in public health2,
Ulrich Schwabe, professor of clinical pharmacology3,
Eric van Ganse, professor of clinical pharmacology4, EuroMedStat group
1 Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3GF,
2 IRPPS/CNR, via Nizza 128, I-00198 Rome, Italy,
3 Pharmacologisckes Institut, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Im Neuenheimer Feld 366, 69120-Heidelberg, Germany,
4 Unité de Pharmacoépidémiologie, University of Lyon, France
Correspondence to: T Walley twalley{at}liv.ac.uk
Introduction
Coronary heart disease remains a major cause of death in most
European countries.
1 Statins lower blood cholesterol concentration
and reduce the relative risk of coronary events by about 30%
in both primary and secondary prevention.
2 Statins are widely
and increasingly used in most European countries, although data
on the extent of this are not generally available.
Methods and results
As part of a wider study on drug use,
3 we collected data on
statin use by total defined daily doses and then calculated
doses per 1000 of the population covered (by the relevant data
source) in 13 of the 15 European Union countries and in Norway
for the year 2000. The data sources were the major publicly
supported sources, mostly governmental or major insurance or
sickness funds (see appendix 2 on bmj.com for details). These
systems cover all or only part of a population, and only the
publicly funded use (except Sweden, which includes both public
and the small privately reimbursed use) in the community (except
Norway, which includes use in small hospitals). For instance,
the Irish data refer only to the population covered by the General
Medical Services Scheme (the poorest third of the population,
who are probably also at highest cardiovascular risk); for Germany,
the Netherlands, France, and Portugal, the data refer to the
population covered by Social Insurances (75-90% of the whole
population, according to the country); "UK" data refer to England
only (83% of UK population). For Austria and Belgium, only aggregated
data on total use and expenditure were available.
Use of statins across Europe was extensive but variable (table). The widest use was in Norway, with over five times the per capita use than in Italy, which had the lowest use. The market leading drug varied between countries, but the most common were simvastatin and atorvastatin. Statin use rose rapidly in all the countries studied: the European average, weighted by population of each country reporting in that year, rose from 11.12 defined daily doses/1000 in 1997 to 41.80/1000 in 2002, an average 31% increase a year.
Comment
Our analysis shows enormous variation in statin use across Europe
and a rapid increase in use. Variations in morbidity may explain
some of the differences in use (such as between Italy and Britain)
but not all (as between Norway and Denmark). We must consider
other explanations, and these may lie in factors unique to each
country: for example, differences between Norway and Denmark
may reflect the involvement of Norwegian doctors in seminal
trials, while in Denmark these drugs were only reimbursed from
1998 onwards and their use has lagged behind other countries.
Low use in Italy may reflect low coronary morbidity or poor
adherence of Italian patients to statins, worse than elsewhere
in Europe.
4 Other differences may lie in national guidance and
policies. These national figures also hide wide variations within
countries.
5
The rapid increase in use may be due to a growing awareness of the effectiveness of these drugs as their evidence base has expanded2 or to government policies that have stressed more aggressive management of risk factors for ischaemic heart disease (such as in Britain). Some of the effect may be due to successful marketing, particularly since the market leaders in many countries were drugs with no evidence of benefits in mortality at the time. This may also explain in part why the heaviest use was in France, which had relatively low cardiovascular mortality even before statins were available. Political, cultural, and social issues determine such use as well as medical indications. In view of the public health implications, these merit more specific study in each country.
Potential influences on results and supplementary data are on bmj.com
Contributors: All members of EuroMedStat contributed to data collection and analysis. All named authors helped to draft this article. PF-G is the project coordinator. TW is guarantor for the article.
Funding: This work was funded by the European Commission, which had no role in the design, data collection, data analysis, interpretation, or writing of this report.
Competing interests: EvG has received unrestricted research funds from a company that manufactures a statin.
References
- World Health Organization. European health for all database. Updated January 2003 http://www.euro.who.int/hfadb (accessed 29 Apr 2003).
- Sudlow C, Lonn E, Pignone M, Ness A, Rihal C. Secondary prevention of ischaemic cardiac events. In: Clinical evidence. Issue 9. London: BMJ Publishing, 2003: 166-205.
- The Euro-Med-Stat Group. Euro-Med-Stat: monitoring expenditure and utilisation of medicinal products in the European Union countries. A public health approach. Eur J Public Health (in press).
- Larsen J, Vaccheri A, Andersen M, Montanaro N, Bergman U. Lack of adherence to lipid-lowering drug treatment. A comparison of utilization patterns in defined populations in Funen, Denmark and Bologna, Italy. Br J Clin Pharmacol
2000;49: 463-71.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
- Majeed A, Moser K, Maxwell R. Age, sex and practice variations in the use of statins in general practice in England and Wales. J Public Health Med
2000;22: 275-9.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
(Accepted 26 November 2003)

CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
StumbleUpon
Technorati What's this?
Relevant Article
-
Statin use varies across Europe and is on the increase
BMJ 2004 328: 0.
[Full Text]
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Mani, K., Bjorck, M., Lundkvist, J., Wanhainen, A.
(2009). Improved Long-Term Survival After Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Repair. Circulation
120: 201-211
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Bonovas, S., Filioussi, K., Flordellis, C. S., Sitaras, N. M.
(2007). Statins and the Risk of Colorectal Cancer: A Meta-Analysis of 18 Studies Involving More Than 1.5 Million Patients. JCO
25: 3462-3468
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Strazzullo, P., Kerry, S. M., Barbato, A., Versiero, M., D'Elia, L., Cappuccio, F. P.
(2007). Do Statins Reduce Blood Pressure?: A Meta-Analysis of Randomized, Controlled Trials. Hypertension
49: 792-798
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Fortuny, J., de Sanjose, S., Becker, N., Maynadie, M., Cocco, P. L., Staines, A., Foretova, L., Vornanen, M., Brennan, P., Nieters, A., Alvaro, T., Boffetta, P.
(2006). Statin Use and Risk of Lymphoid Neoplasms: Results from the European Case-Control Study EPILYMPH.. Cancer Epidemiol. Biomarkers Prev.
15: 921-925
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Green, L. A., Fryer, G. E. Jr, Froom, P., Culpepper, L., Froom, J.
(2004). Opportunities, Challenges, and Lessons of International Research in Practice-Based Research Networks: The Case of an International Study of Acute Otitis Media. Ann Fam Med
2: 429-433
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
(2004). Variations and increase in use of statins across Europe: data from administrative databases. BMJ
329: 323-323
[Full text]
Rapid Responses:
Read all Rapid Responses
- Misleading statement re statin benefit in primary prevention.
- Eddie Vos
bmj.com, 14 Feb 2004
[Full text]
- Re: Misleading statement re statin benefit in primary prevention.
- L S Lewis
bmj.com, 15 Feb 2004
[Full text]
- Re: Re: Misleading statement re statin benefit in primary prevention.
- Eddie Vos
bmj.com, 16 Feb 2004
[Full text]
- 'Padma Therapy' : Say 'Cheerio' To Statins
- Joseph . C . Obi
bmj.com, 17 Feb 2004
[Full text]
- Stain Use
- Robert W Johns, et al.
bmj.com, 18 Feb 2004
[Full text]
- Italy: last position both in use of statins therapy and in the sensitivity of own coronary risk assessment chart
- Giavarina Davide
bmj.com, 20 Feb 2004
[Full text]
- Italy: increasing statin consumption and low compliance
- Iosief Abraha, et al.
bmj.com, 25 Feb 2004
[Full text]
- The use of DDDs may lead to invalid comparisons
- Aukje K. Mantel-Teeuwisse, et al.
bmj.com, 11 Mar 2004
[Full text]
- Statin usage in Australia and New Zealand, and problems with use of DDDs
- Scott Metcalfe, et al.
bmj.com, 17 Mar 2004
[Full text]