Lowering LDL Cholesterol Linked to 25% Lower Stroke Risk
Lowering LDL Cholesterol Linked to 25% Lower Stroke Risk
Author: Deborah Brauser
Source: Medscape Medical News – AHA Scientific Sessions 2025
Date: November 11, 2025
Keynotes:
1) • Achieving LDL < 40 mg/dL in patients with prior ischemic stroke significantly reduces:
• 31% ↓ MACE
• 27% ↓ all strokes
• 25% ↓ ischemic stroke
• No increase in hemorrhagic stroke risk.
2) Study Details
• Data from 5291 patients (FOURIER + FOURIER-OLE).
• Follow-up: 7–8 years.
• Benefit increased stepwise as LDL decreased (“the lower, the better”).
• Even <20 mg/dL showed no safety signal.
3) Clinical Meaning
• Extremely low LDL appears safe despite older concerns about hemorrhagic stroke.
• Supports more aggressive LDL targets for stroke survivors.
• May influence upcoming AHA/ACC 2026 cholesterol guideline update.
4) Background Context
• Current US guideline threshold: <70 mg/dL (AHA/ACC 2018).
• ESC/EAS 2019 recommends <55 mg/dL for very high-risk patients.
• The new analysis suggests even <40 mg/dL may be ideal.
5) Expert Opinions
• Investigators: “No floor effect — lower LDL consistently improves outcomes.”
• External experts confirm results as strong evidence supporting safety and benefit.
6) Conclusion
• Very intensive LDL lowering (<40 mg/dL) in ischemic stroke patients
→ reduces recurrent stroke & cardiovascular events
→ no increase in hemorrhagic stroke
→ likely practice-changing in 2026
