use the clinical findings, lipid profile and family history to judge the likelihood of a familial lipid disorder rather than the use of strict lipid cut-off values alone
exclude possible common secondary causes of dyslipidaemia (such as excess alcohol, uncontrolled diabetes, hypothyroidism, liver disease and nephrotic syndrome) before referring for specialist review
consider the possibility of familial hypercholesterolaemia if they have:
a total cholesterol concentration more than 7.5 mmol/litre
and a family history of premature coronary heart disease
arrange for specialist assessment of people with a total cholesterol concentration of more than 9.0 mmol/litre or a non-HDL cholesterol concentration of more than 7.5 mmol/litre even in the absence of a first-degree family history of premature coronary heart disease
refer for urgent specialist review if a person has a triglyceride concentration of more than 20 mmol/litre that is not a result of excess alcohol or poor glycaemic control
in people with a triglyceride concentration between 10 and 20 mmol/litre:
repeat the triglyceride measurement with a fasting test (after an interval of 5 days, but within 2 weeks) and review for potential secondary causes of hyperlipidaemia
and seek specialist advice if the triglyceride concentration remains above 10 mmol/litre
in people with a triglyceride concentration between 4.5 and 9.9 mmol/litre:
be aware that the CVD risk may be underestimated by risk assessment tools and optimise the management of other CVD risk factors present
and seek specialist advice if non-HDL cholesterol concentration is more than 7.5 mmol/ litre
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