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Cardiovascular Risk Stratification: ASCVD Calculator and What FNPs Need to Know

Statins. Aspirin. Blood pressure goals. Cardiovascular risk stratification underpins every primary care decision for adults. And yet, many FNP candidates walk into boards still fuzzy on when to start a statin, when to add aspirin, and what risk threshold drives those decisions.

Let's clean this up.

If you know how to use the ASCVD calculator and interpret what it tells you, you can answer most CV risk questions on the exam.

What the ASCVD Calculator Does

The American College of Cardiology / American Heart Association pooled cohort equation calculates a patient's 10-year risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease โ€” meaning MI, stroke, or CV death.

Inputs:

Output: percentage risk over 10 years.

Risk Categories

When to Start a Statin

The exam tests this constantly. Four indications for primary or secondary prevention:

  1. Clinical ASCVD: known MI, stroke, PAD, stable angina. High-intensity statin.
  2. LDL โ‰ฅ 190 mg/dL: high-intensity statin regardless of age or other risk factors.
  3. Diabetes, age 40โ€“75, LDL โ‰ฅ 70: moderate-intensity statin. High-intensity if 10-year ASCVD risk โ‰ฅ 20%.
  4. Age 40โ€“75 without diabetes, LDL 70โ€“189, 10-year ASCVD risk โ‰ฅ 7.5%: moderate-intensity statin. Shared decision for borderline-risk patients.

Statin Intensity Categories

Note: simvastatin 80 mg is no longer recommended due to myopathy risk.

Test Pearl: Know the four buckets that get a statin and which intensity is indicated. This is the most tested CV prevention concept.

Statin Side Effects

Aspirin for Primary Prevention

The guidelines have shifted significantly. Current USPSTF (2022):

The exam may still reference older guidelines (75โ€“325 mg). Stay alert to wording.

Blood Pressure Targets for CV Prevention

Lipid Goals

The current approach is intensity-based (high vs. moderate statin), not LDL-target based. However, in real practice and on some exam questions, you'll still see LDL goals:

When Statins Aren't Enough

If LDL remains elevated despite max-tolerated statin:

Other Risk Enhancers

When risk is borderline (5โ€“7.5%) or intermediate (7.5โ€“20%) and you're not sure whether to treat, look for risk enhancers:

If any are present, lean toward treating.

How to Use This on the Exam

When the exam describes a patient, do the mental ASCVD math:

  1. Do they have known ASCVD or LDL โ‰ฅ190 or diabetes 40โ€“75? Statin.
  2. If none of those, calculate 10-year risk (or use clues โ€” age, BP, smoker, lipids, sex).
  3. โ‰ฅ7.5%? Statin.
  4. 5โ€“7.5%? Consider statin if risk enhancers present.

That algorithm answers most CV prevention questions.

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