PRIMARY AND SECONDARY PREVENTION OF CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES David R. Musselman, M.D., F.A.C.C., F.A.C.P North Texas Heart Center, P.A.
Jan 15, 2016
PRIMARY AND SECONDARY PREVENTION OF CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES
David R. Musselman, M.D., F.A.C.C., F.A.C.P
North Texas Heart Center, P.A.
Primary and Secondary Prevention Primary prevention
– preventive measures in patients without diagnosed cardiovascular disease
Secondary prevention– preventive measures in patients with diagnosis of cardiovascular disease
Diabetes mellitus = Cardiovascular disease diagnosis
3 Interventions Types
1. Therapeutic interventions for secondary prevention for patients with known cardiovascular disease (ex. pharmacological interventions)
2. Identification of high-risk individuals for primary prevention through mass screening or case finding (lipid profiles, BP screening)
3. General recommendations disseminated throughout the population for primary prevention (ex. dietary and exercise recommendations)
* Implementation requires a practical systematic approach to prioritizing interventions and allocating resources (interventions vary dramatically in cost, both individually and to society)
Introduction
Framingham Heart Study gave modern medicine the term “Risk Factor”-Kannel et al 1961
Risk Factor-parameter that can predict a future cardiovascular event
Risk prediction-what matters most is the predictive value of the risk factor, the feasibility of assessing it, and the cost of assessment
4 categories of risk factors– predisposing factors– risk-modifying behaviors– metabolic risk factors– disease markers
4 Types Risk Factors
Predisposing factors– Age, gender, family history, genetics
Risk-modifying behaviors– Smoking, atherogenic diet, alcohol intake, sedentary lifestyle
Metabolic risk factors– Dyslipidemia, HTN, obesity, DM, metabolic syndrome
Disease markers– Calcium score, catheterization results, stress test results, LVH,
personal history of vascular disease, inflammatory state
3 Classes of Intervention
Class 1 Interventions– those for risk factors with a clear causal relationship with heart
disease, where the benefits of intervention have been established Class 2 Interventions
– those for risk factors that appear to have a causal relationship with heart disease, for which data suggest that intervention will probably reduce coronary events, but for which there are limited data regarding the benefits, risks or costs of intervention
Class 3 Interventions– those for which an independent causal relationship with heart
disease is suspected, but is yet unproved
Cost Efficiency of Preventative Interventions Common currency used to compare interventions
– QALY-Quality Adjusted Life Year• Long term-very significant• Short term-less significant
QALY<$40,000 comparable to other chronic interventions– Hemodialysis– HTN management
QALY<$20,000 considered highly effective strategies
QALY>$40,000 very expensive, difficult societal acceptance
4 Classes of Risk Intervention
Class 1 (risk intervention proven to lower CVD risk)– Cigarette smoking– LDL cholesterol– High-fat/cholesterol diet– HTN
Class 2 (risk intervention likely to lower CVD risk)– DM– Physical inactivity– HDL– Triglycerides, small dense LDL– Obesity– Post menopausal status
Classes of Risk Intervention
Class 3 (risk intervention might lower CVD risk)– Psychosocial factors– Lp(a)– Homosteine– Oxidative stress– Alcohol abstinence
Class 4 (risk associated with CVD, risk can not be modified)– Age– Low socioeconomic status– Family history of early-onset CVD
Smoking Cessation-Class 1
Prevalence – increased in the first half of the 20th century and has been declining
since 1963
Prevalence by gender– Men 25%– Women 21%
Prevalence– greater in African Americans– greater with less education– greater with lower income
Smoking Cessation-Incidence
Smoking doubles incidence of CHD and increases CHD mortality by 50%
Risk increases with number of cigarettes smoked and with age
Smoking causes 440,000 excess deaths in USA per year, 6 million years of lost life
Smoking rates are rising rapidly in developing countries
Smoking Cessation-Benefits
Smokers who quit reduce risk by 50% (most in the first few months)
After cessation, risk approaches baseline in 5-15 years
Smoking cessation is highly cost effective– programs cost less than continued smoking– $1100-$4500 per QALY
Often repeat intervention is needed
Smoking Cessation-Treatment
Counseling and behavioral therapies (6-18% effective) – Problem solving and skills training– Social support within treatment– Social support outside treatment
Pharmacological therapies (20-40% effective)– Bupropion (Wellbutrin)– Supplemental nicotine
• Gum• Patch• Nasal spray• Lozenge
Smoking reduction in not acceptable therapy Time of cardiac event is opportune time for intervention
Hypertension-Class 1
Prevalence– Increases with age (9% at age 19-24 years, 75 % age>75 years)– African Americans>Whites– Men>Women
Associated risk– The shape of the CVD risk curve with BP is linear– Increment of 20mmHg SBP or 10mmHg DBP doubles risk of CVD
Benefit of intervention– Many randomized trials confirmed the protective effect of treating mild to moderate
HTN– 10mmHg decrease in SBP, sustained of 10 years, prevents 1 CVD death in 10
people treated– ALLHAT demonstrated efficacy of thiazide diuretics compared with other agents
Hypertension-Treatment
Treatment Guidelines– Routine BP screening of all adults– JNC-7 Goals
• 140/90 for lower risk patients• 130/80 for those with CVD, DM or kidney disease• All patients with BP >120/80 should receive life- style modifications• ALLHAT-Thiazide diuretic should be the first-step antihypertensive therapy
Compelling indications of Individual antihypertensive drug classes• CHF-Diuretic, BB, ACE-I, ARB, CCB, AA• MI-BB, ACE-I, AA• High CVD risk-Diuretic, BB, ACE-I, CCB• DM-Diuretic, BB, ACE-I, ARB, CCB• Kidney disease-ARB, CCB• CVA-Diuretic, ACE-I
Hypertension-Challenges and Costs Challenges
– HTN increasing in the developing world– 40% of those with HTN do not know they have the disease– 1/3 of patients being treated do not reach goal
Cost Efficacy-Detection and management of HTN are highly cost effective– In secondary prevention, using diuretics and BB’s cost is
<$10,000/QALY– In primary prevention, cost $10,000-$20,000/QALY in moderate to severe
HTN– Cost may be>$100,000/QALY with more expensive antihypertensive
agents
Hypercholesterolema-Class1
Prevalence– Cholesterol levels have been declining since the 1960’s in USA– 1/2 of Americans have cholesterol level >200mg/dl– 18% have cholesterol levels >240mg/dl
Associated Risk• 10% increase in total cholesterol is associated with a 20-30%
increase in CVD risk• Elevations early in life are associated with increases in risk
Hypercholesterolema-Benefit of intervention Clear benefits of treatment have been demonstrated in
multiple studies– Patients with established CAD– Patients with CAD, vascular disease or DM with average cholesterol
levels– Elderly patients at risk for CAD– Patients following MI of CABG– Patients with several risk factors for CAD
• Large Meta-analysis of statin therapy (31,000 patients)– Duration 5.4 years– Average reduction of 20% in total cholesterol, 28% in LDL, and 13 % in placebo– Risk reduction 31% in CVD events, 21% all-cause mortality reduction
Long-term compliance is important for successful intervention
Hypercholesterolema-Cost efficiency Cost efficiency of non-pharmacological interventions is
unclear
Pharmacological intervention is clearly cost-effective in secondary prevention– 4-S Trial -$5,400/QALY for men, $10,500/QALY for women– Cost decreases as lipid levels increase– In primary prevention statins fail to reach a cost effective ratio
(>$50,000/QALY)– Calculations are highly sensitive to drug cost– Hopefully drug costs will decrease in the future
Hypercholesterolema-Treatment
All CVD patients should be screened In primary prevention, age of screening is controversial (20-45 years)
NCEP (National Cholesterol Education Program)/ATP(Adult Treatment Panel)
– ATPIII-Different targets on calculated Framingham risk score• Existing CVD (DM or PVD)-LDL <100mg/dl• Without CVD
– <2 risk factors :LDL<130mg/dl– Low risk patients :LDL<160mg/dl
Dietary recommendations– 25-35% fat (<7% saturated)– Complex carbohydrates, 50-60% calories– Protein 15% calories– High dietary fiber
Exercise
Hypercholesterolema-Treatment
Benefits of statins in addition to lipid lowering– Anti-proliferative effects– Anti-oxidant effects– Plaque-stabilizing effects– Change in lipid content of plaque
New NCEP guidelines-”Lower is better”– Lower LDL goal to <70mg/dl (CVD of equivalent)– Lower LDL goal to <100mg/dl (>2 risk factors)– There does not appear to be an LDL below which risk does not fall
HDL and Triglycerides-Class 1
Low HDL and high triglycerides tend to coincide and may occur with or without high LDL levels
Associated risk– HDL-independent risk factor, 1 mg/dl decrease causes 3-4% increase in CVD risk– LDL/HDL ratio highly predictive, 1U decrease in ratio reduces risk by 50%
Benefits of intervention– Gemfibrozil: VA-HIT-22% risk reduction in patients with HDL <40mg/dl– Niacin therapy
Recommendations– Full fasting lipid profile– Diet and exercise in primary prevention– Pharmacological therapy in secondary prevention
Antiplatlet Agents-Secondary Prevention, Class 1
ASA in existing CVD reduces subsequent risk by 25%
Unless contraindicated, ASA should be used by most patients
Clopidigril and ticlopidine should be considered for patients with ASA allergy or intolerance
Cost– ASA $11,000/QALY– Clopidigril $130,000/QALY
Antiplatlet Agents-Primary prevention
5 large primary prevention trials of low-dose ASA– Meta-analysis-small benefit in men– Concern regarding increased risk of hemorrhagic stroke– Data on women is limited
Breakpoint– Use low-dose ASA if 10-year risk of CVD is >6% in men– Ongoing Women’s Health Study addressing risk-benefit ratio in
primary prevention
Beta-blockers-Class 1
Many trials have demonstrated long-term efficacy of BB after MI in mortality reduction– About 25% reduction over long term
Many trials have also shown reduction in recurrent CVD events
Greater efficacy of BB with increased beta-blockade as assessed by heart rate reduction
BB effective in CHF, especially carvedilol BB are highly cost-effective ($11,000/QALY)
ACE-I’s and ARB’s-Class 1
Benefits of ACE-I is large after MI– 7% mortality reduction at 30 days with normal LVEF– 26% mortality reduction at 30 days with low LVEF
HOPE Trial demonstrated 22% reduction in major clinical events in low risk patients without CVD, DM or CHF
CHARM-Use of candesartin in patients with CHF prevents– 1 death per 63 patients treated– 1 hospitalization per 23 patients treated– 1 new case of DM per 71 patients treated
Diabetes mellitus and metabolic syndrome-Class 2
Prevalence– 6% of US population– 90% of DM is Type 2– 1/3 of people with disease are unaware of its presence– Incidence increases with increasing BMI
Associated risk– Very powerful risk factor for CVD– CVD causes 69% of deaths in DM patients– 7-8 fold increase in CVD risk, compared with age-matched
population without DM
Obesity-Class 2
Prevalence-2/3 of US population has BMI>25, considered over weight or obese
Early obesity is considered a strong marker of CVD risk– Whether excess weight is an independent risk factor for CVD is
unclear because of other risk factors and metabolic disorders associated with obesity
Abdominal adiposity associated with greater risk (waist circumference 35” in women, 40” in men)
No randomized trial of weight reduction, as an isolated intervention, to evaluate benefits of lowering risk of CVD
However, even modest weight loss improves lipids, glycemic control, BP and sleep apnea
Obesity-Class 2
Little consensus on ideal approach to weight reduction Failure rates are exceedingly high Cost effectiveness data are unavailable A multi-factorial approach seem most effective
– Dietary counseling– Behavioral modification– Increased physical activity– Psychosocial support– Pharmacological therapy and bariatric surgery
Recommendations for intervention– All patients with BMI>30– CVD patients or >2 risk factors with BMI>25
Physical inactivity-Class 2
Prevalence– 75% or Americans do not meet the current recommendations of 30 minutes of
leisure-time physical activity on most days of the week– One-third do not engage in any physical exercise– Exercise for children has declined and sedentary activities has dramatically
increased Data from 40 observational studies demonstrate an inverse dose-response
relationship between volume of physical activity and all-cause mortality Energy expenditure of 1000kcal/week reduces all-cause mortality by 30% CVD risk in sedentary individuals is doubled compared with physically
active individuals, when controlled for other CVD risk factors
Physical inactivity-Class 2
Activity can be as simple as brisk walking
Mortality reduction benefits are also present in the elderly who initiate new exercise programs
Exercise also reduced the risk of stroke and new onset DM
However, there is no large-scale randomized trials of physical activity in primary prevention
In secondary prevention, regular exercise reduces mortality by 25%
Exercise clearly has beneficial effects on other CVD risk factors (increase HDL, reduce LDL, lower BP, increase insulin sensitivity)
Recommendations: 30-60 minutes of moderate activity on most days of the week (primary and secondary prevention)
Anticoagulants-Class 2
Role is uncertain as the results of randomized trials is inconsistent
In meta-analyses, high and medium-intensity oral anticoagulation reduced MI and stroke rates, but increased bleeding complications
Low intensity anticoagulation does not appear to confer benefit over ASA alone
Postmenopausal estrogen therapy-Class 3 Before age 45, CVD is rare in women. After age 60 CVD is the
leading cause of death. The gap in CVD rates between men and women narrows after menopause (and oophorectomy)
After menopause, LDL rises, HDL falls, insulin resistance increases, vascular function decline and there are adverse changes in coagulation
Physiological effects of supplemental are consistent with a cardio-protective effect
Postmenopausal estrogen therapy-Class 3 Meta-analyses of 40 cohort studies suggested a 50%
reduction in CVD risk. This was true for primary and secondary prevention
Data from 7 randomized trials not only failed to support a benefit of hormone therapy, but actually demonstrated an increased CVD risk
HERS Trial (secondary prevention)-no CVD benefit
Hormone therapy is no longer recommended to prevent CVD
Psychosocial factors-Class 3
Depression, chronic hostility, social isolation, lack of social support have been consistently linked with CVD
Data on intervention is limited and confounded by difficulty in measurement and inconsistent definitions
One meta-analysis of 37 studies demonstrated a 29% reduction in recurrent MI and 34% in total mortality with reduction in psychosocial stressors
SADHART and ENRICHD studies, pharmacologic treatment of depression after MI, reduced second MI rates, CHF, recurrent angina and CVD death rates
Dietary Factors-Class 3
Observational factors have suggested that a number of dietary factors may increase CVD risk
Ni-Hon-San Study-Japanese immigrants to Hawaii and California
Observational studies– Diet high fruit and vegetables-lower CVD risk– High fat and trans-fat diets-higher CVD risk– Diet high in simple carbohydrates-higher CVD risk– Low fiber diets-higher CVD risk– Diets high in omega-3 fatty acids-lower CVD risk– “Mediterranean diet”-lower CVD risk (secondary prevention study)
Specific foods and nutrients– Whole grains, fiber, fish, fish oils, soy protein, folate, vitamin B6, Vitamin E, coenzyme Q10-
observational studies suggest lower rates of CVD risk– Vitamin E-in randomized trials, little effect on CVD risk, possibly a detrimental effect
Novel biochemical markers-Class 3 CRP-only marker to add prognostic information over and above Framingham
risk scoring
CRP best used as an adjunct to risk prediction among those at intermediate risk
EBCT-very expensive
Homocysteine-predicts risk, however data on treatment efficacy (folate, B6. and B12) is lacking
Other markers– Lp(a)– Interleukin-6– Phospholipase A2– Factor V Leiden
Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Programs Measure the impact of several risk factors simultaneously-
analogous to clinical practice
WHO Trial (World Health Organization Trial)-substantial CVD risk reduction with multi-risk-factor approach
In general data is lacking