Patient Population Under Consideration
This recommendation applies to asymptomatic children and adolescents
20 years or younger without a known diagnosis of a lipid disorder.
Suggestions for Practice Regarding the I Statement
Potential Preventable Burden
Heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia is an autosomal dominant disorder caused primarily by mutations in the LDL receptor (LDLR)
gene (NCBI Entrez Gene 3949) that causes severe elevations in levels of
LDL-C, resulting in early atherosclerotic lesions. Children with
familial hypercholesterolemia can have TC and LDL-C levels 2 to 3 times
higher than those of unaffected children. Familial hypercholesterolemia
is generally asymptomatic in childhood and adolescence and is rarely
associated with cardiovascular events in the first 2 decades of life.1
The burden of familial hypercholesterolemia is attributable to
premature cardiovascular events in adulthood resulting from long-term
exposure to elevated serum cholesterol levels and atherosclerosis.
Studies conducted before statin use became common suggest that
familial hypercholesterolemia is associated with a cumulative incidence
of ischemic heart disease in 1 of 6 men and 1 of 10 women by age 40
years. By age 50 years, 25% of women and 50% of men with untreated
familial hypercholesterolemia will experience clinical cardiovascular
disease.5 Coronary artery disease occurs in 50% of men by age 50 years and 30% of women by age 60 years.7, 8
Mortality from coronary artery disease is greater in adults younger
than 60 years with familial hypercholesterolemia. Among adults surviving
to age 60 years, the risk of coronary heart disease approaches that of
the general population.1, 9
Multifactorial dyslipidemia is defined by elevated levels of LDL-C
(≥130 mg/dL) or TC (≥200 mg/dL) that are not attributable to familial
hypercholesterolemia.2
Several longitudinal studies have documented an association between
childhood lipid levels in this range and measures of atherosclerosis in
adulthood.1
Studies show that tracking lipid levels from childhood and adolescence
to adulthood cannot predict which individuals will have elevated LDL-C
or TC as adults.2
In addition, the association between multifactorial dyslipidemia in
childhood and adolescence and clinical cardiovascular disease in
adulthood is unknown.
Potential Harms
Most children with elevated lipid levels of a multifactorial origin
will not progress to a clinically important lipid disorder or develop
premature cardiovascular disease and are therefore subject to
overdiagnosis. Screening could result in the labeling of children with a
“nondisease,” parental or child anxiety, or unnecessary or harmful
testing and treatment. The adverse effects of long-term use of
lipid-lowering pharmacotherapy and lifestyle modification (including
diet and physical activity) have not been adequately studied.
Current Practice
Generally, screening rates for dyslipidemia in children and
adolescents seen in primary care have been low. According to the
National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, 2.5% of well-child visits
included lipid testing in 1995, and 3.2% included it in 2010.10
Claims data from health insurance plans report rare use of
lipid-lowering pharmacotherapy in 8- to 20-year-olds. Among more than 13
million children, 665 children initiated lipid-lowering pharmacotherapy
between 2005 and 2010, for an overall incidence rate of 2.6
prescriptions per 100,000 person-years (95% CI, 0.1 to 2.7).11
Screening Tests
Normal lipid level values for children and adolescents are currently
defined by population distributions of lipid levels from the Lipid
Research Clinics Prevalence Study, which was conducted in the 1970s.2, 12
In 1992, the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) proposed
fixed threshold values to define dyslipidemia in children (TC ≥200
mg/dL, LDL-C ≥130 mg/dL, or both). These values are slightly lower than
the 95th percentile observed in the Lipid Research Clinics Prevalence
Study for both boys and girls at nearly all ages, although there are
some age-related variations in adolescence.2, 13
Cholesterol levels vary by sex and age throughout childhood. Total
cholesterol levels increase from birth, stabilize at approximately age 2
years, peak before puberty, and then decline slightly during
adolescence.2, 12
The accepted cutoff values for elevated LDL-C and TC may overidentify
or underidentify children and adolescents, depending on age and sex.2
Abnormal lipid levels in youth are based on population distributions,
not associations with health outcomes. It is unclear to what degree
elevated lipid levels in children and adolescents 20 years or younger
are associated with future disease risk.
Elevated lipid levels track modestly into adulthood, making it
difficult to predict which children and adolescents will continue to
have elevated cholesterol levels as adults.2, 15, 16
Longitudinal studies suggest that elevated LDL-C levels in adolescence
predict elevated LDL-C 15 to 20 years later, with a positive predictive
value of 32.9% to 37.3% and lower predictive values among younger
children.17
Levels of TC may be measured with fasting or nonfasting serum testing
. Serum (or plasma) TC and HDL-C levels do not change appreciably
according to a fasting or nonfasting state. Serum LDL-C levels may be
calculated using the Friedewald formula (LDL-C = TC − [triglycerides/5] –
HDL-C). Because accurate calculation depends on triglyceride levels,
serum testing requires a fasting state. Direct measurement of LDL-C does
not require fasting and is preferred when triglyceride levels are
greater than 400 mg/dL.2 Recent guidelines on screening for dyslipidemia in children recommend measuring either LDL-C or non–HDL-C levels.18
Screening strategies for dyslipidemia in clinical practice include
selective or universal screening. Selective screening is based on family
history of dyslipidemia or premature cardiovascular disease. Universal
screening is based only on age. Cascade screening is a common screening
strategy for familial hypercholesterolemia in other countries. Cascade
screening involves case-finding among relatives of patients with
confirmed familial hypercholesterolemia and testing for genetic variants
identified in the first affected relative (ie, the proband). However,
the U.S. health system does not currently have the infrastructure to
implement cascade screening.2
There are no universally accepted criteria for the diagnosis of
familial hypercholesterolemia. Studies of children and adolescents with
familial hypercholesterolemia use several different diagnostic criteria.
All of the criteria use a combination of elevated lipid levels,
physical findings, family history, or genetic tests to establish the
diagnosis.1
Treatment of Dyslipidemia
Interventions for dyslipidemia include lifestyle modification (eg,
changes in diet and physical activity) and pharmacotherapy (e.g.,
statins, bile-acid sequestering agents, or cholesterol absorption
inhibitors).
Statins, or 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl coenzyme A reductase
inhibitors, have been widely adopted for use in adults with
hypercholesterolemia, because these drugs are effective at reducing
cardiovascular events in high-risk adults. As a result of their efficacy
in adults, statins are one of the first-line medications considered for
use in children and adolescents with hypercholesterolemia.2, 19
The appropriate age at which to start statin use in children with
familial hypercholesterolemia is subject to debate. Some experts
recommend starting statin use at age 8 or 10 years; others, concerned
with adverse effects, recommend initiating use at age 20 years.22 The long-term effects of statin use in children and adolescents are unknown.
Useful Resources
The USPSTF recommends that clinicians screen for obesity in children 6
years or older and offer them or refer them to a comprehensive,
intensive behavioral intervention (B recommendation).20
The USPSTF found insufficient evidence on screening for primary
hypertension in asymptomatic children and adolescents to prevent
subsequent cardiovascular disease in childhood or adulthood (I
statement).21 These recommendations are available on the USPSTF website (www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org).