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School-based universal screening for hypercholesterolemia in children.

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BACKGROUND In 2011, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommended universal lipid screening during childhood and adolescence. However, this approach was shown to be lacking in adherence. Only 6% of non-high-risk… Click to show full abstract

BACKGROUND In 2011, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommended universal lipid screening during childhood and adolescence. However, this approach was shown to be lacking in adherence. Only 6% of non-high-risk children received lipid screening by age 12. Our study designed a school-based universal screening for hypercholesterolemia in children. The goal was to investigate a feasible strategy for lipid screening of children. METHODS The study enrolled all the fourth-grade students of 30 elementary schools from 2020 to 2021. Non-fasting non-HDL was used as a screening tool. These students were classified into three groups: acceptable group (non-HDL < 120 mg/dL), borderline group (120-144 mg/dL), and abnormal group (≥145 mg/dL). The abnormal group was referred to our hospital for confirmatory fasting lipid studies. The complete rate and timing were calculated. RESULTS Six hundred students were enrolled in this study. In the abnormal group (95 children), a total of 92 students received confirmatory fasting lipid studies. These confirmatory studies were completed within three months after the family received their reports. The study had a rate of coverage of 62% and the referred percentage of the abnormal group was 97%. BMI had poor association with fasting LDL (CORR = 0.06752, p = 0.444). In the abnormal group, only 29.5% children had family history of early CVD or dyslipidemia. CONCLUSION School-based universal screening for hypercholesterolemia in children is a feasible and effective way to identify patients at high-risk for early CVD. Neither BMI nor family history was a good indicator for the screening of dyslipidemia.

Keywords: hypercholesterolemia children; school based; based universal; universal screening; group; screening hypercholesterolemia

Journal Title: Pediatrics and neonatology
Year Published: 2022

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