Title: Coronary Heart Disease Medication
1Coronary Heart Disease Medication
- Robert Hallworth
- Chair Greater Manchester Non-Medical
Prescribing Network
Oldham Primary Care Trust
2CHD - so who do we mean and what should we look
at?
- Established - post MI, CABG, ischaemic stroke /
TIA, angina, AF, PVD - Heart failure
- Hypertension
- (Diabetes)
- Raised cholesterol, obesity, smokers
- Intervention review based on current status,
risk factors, existing treatment - Targets in the GMS contract
3CaseIt is a busy day in your practice and
you are sitting at your desk, legs up, leafing
through a recent issue of Diversion, The Magazine
for Physicians at Leisure. You come across an ad
for Plavix,TM which states that this medication
reduces the risk of cardiovascular events by 9
compared to aspirin. You wonder if you should be
switching all your patients to Plavix. TM
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6 7Primary prevention statin therapy NICE 2008
- Offer statin therapy for adults who have a 20 or
greater 10-year risk of developing CVD - Initiate treatment with simvastatin 40 mg
- If simvastatin 40 mg is contraindicated, offer a
lower dose or alternative preparation (such as
pravastatin) - A target for total or LDL cholesterol is not
- recommended
8Secondary prevention statin therapy NICE 2008
- Offer statin therapy to adults with clinical
evidence of CVD - Offer higher intensity statin to people with
acute coronary syndrome, taking into account - the patients informed preference
- comorbidities
- multiple drug therapy, and
- the benefits and risks of treatment
9Secondary prevention statin therapy continued
- Treatment should be initiated with simvastatin
40 mg - If simvastatin 40 mg is contraindicated, offer a
lower dose or alternative preparation (such as
pravastatin) - If total cholesterol of lt 4 mmol/litre or LDL
- cholesterol of lt 2 mmol/litre is not attained
consider simvastatin 80 mg (or similar)
10Targets for PCT Advisers
- Better Care Better Value
- Statins
- Generic Prescribing
- National Audit Office
- Proton Pump Inhibitors
- ACE inhibitors / Angiotensin 2 Receptor
Antagonists - Antiplatelets
- Other important cost areas
- Drugs used in diabetes
- Respiratory corticosteroids
- Analgesics
- Hypertension and Heart Failure
11What is our approach for primary and secondary
prevention?
Will this differ based on the age of our patient?
Will this differ if our patient has diabetes?
12A recent meta-analysisCholesterol Treatment
Trialists' (CTT) CollaboratorsLancet 2005 366
1267-1278.
- Statin therapy reduces the relative risk of major
events by one fifth (20) for every 1mmol/L
reduction in LDL cholesterol (but is there really
a linear relationship?). - This is largely irrespective of the initial lipid
profile or other presenting characteristics. - The absolute benefit relates chiefly to an
individual's absolute risk of such events and to
the absolute reduction in LDL cholesterol
achieved. - Statins at established doses (e.g. simvastatin
40mg) can reduce LDL cholesterol by at least
15mmol/L in many patients, and hence would be
expected to reduce the incidence of major
vascular events by about one third. - The possibility that higher doses would result in
clinically relevant adverse effects cannot be
excluded. -
13Summary of High-Dose POO Studies
- A-Z study (JAMA 2004 292 1307-1316)
simvastatin 80mg vs. no statin/20mg simvastatin
after AMI No significant benefit, problem with
harms on higher dose myopathy and
rhabdomyolysis - PROVE-IT (N Engl J Med 2004 350 1495-1504)
atorvastatin 80mg vs. pravastatin 40mg post ACS
Significant benefit not much harm seen - TNT (N Engl J Med 2005 352 1425-1435)
atorvastatin 80mg vs. atorvastatin 10mg in stable
CHD (but who responded well to atorvastatin in
the run-in) Significant benefit but also
significant harm - IDEAL (JAMA 2005 294 2437-2445) atorvastin
80mg vs. simvastatin 20mg in stable CHD No
significant benefit, some harm - SPARCL (N Engl J Med 2006 355 549-559)
atorvastatin 80mg vs. placebo in stroke/TIA
Significant benefit, some harm
14Use a statin in patients with ACS de Lemos JA, et
al. JAMA 2004 292 1307?16 Cannon CP, et al. N
Engl J Med 2004 350 1495?504 Pedersen TR, et
al. JAMA 2005 294 2437?45
- Phase Z of the A to Z trial showed no difference
in event rates between simvastatin 40mg od for 1
month followed by 80mg od compared to placebo for
4 months followed by simvastatin 20mg od. There
were 3 cases of rhabdomyolysis in patients
receiving 80mg simvastatin. - PROVE-IT compared pravastatin 40mg to
atorvastatin 80mg. The primary endpoint was time
to first of death, MI, re-hospitalisation for UA,
revascularisation or stroke. 22.4 of patients in
the atorvastatin arm had these events at 2 years
compared to 26.3 in the pravastatin group. - IDEAL showed no difference in the primary
endpoint of time to first coronary death, MI or
resuscitated cardiac arrest between simvastatin
or atorvastatin
15Statins
- Baseline
- Serum cholesterol, LFTs, CK, UEs (rosuvastatin),
TFT - Routine
- Cholesterol
- Every 12 months
- CK
- Within 1-3 months when cholesterol checked,
after dose increase or when given with a fibrate - LFTs
- Within 1-3 months, then at 6 and 12 months or if
hepatotoxicity suspected (greater risk with
higher doses rosuvastatin 40mg / simvastatin
80mg)
16Discontinuing statins
- Serum transaminases at 3 x upper limit of normal
- Beware higher doses
- If myopathy occurs (daily discomfort)
- CK gt 5 x upper limit of normal
- Liver disease is likely to be obstructive
17Cholesterol measurements in the first few years
of statin treatment may mislead
- Galsziou P et al. Monitoring cholesterol levels
measurement error or true change? Ann Intern Med
2008 148 656-61 - Health professionals should be wary of increasing
a patients lipid-lowering treatment on the basis
of a single cholesterol test if they are
reasonably confident that the patient is taking
the medication as prescribed.
18OTC Simvastatin
- Is an initial cholesterol test needed?
- How often do LFTs and CK need monitoring?
HPS suggests Up to 40mg simvastatin adverse
effects placebo
19SEAS and ezetimibe no benefits on CV endpoints,
questions raised over cancer risk
- Rossebo AB et al for the SEAS Investigators.
Intensive lipid lowering with simvastatin and
ezetimibe in aortic stenosis. N Engl J Med 2008
359 - It would seem sensible to use ezetimibe only with
caution as there is no published evidence of its
benefit on clinically important outcomes such as
cardiovascular events and its long-term safety is
unknown
20Fibrates
- Baseline serum cholesterol, LFTs, CK
- Routine cholesterol (every 12 months), LFTs
(every 3 months for 1 year), FBC (gemfibrozil
every 3 months for 1 year) - DISCONTINUE
- Serum transaminase 3 x ULN
- Myopathy symptoms or CK gt 10 x ULN
21Omacor
- Licensed for hypertriglyceridaemia (high dose)
and secondary prevention of MI (low dose). - Main data comes from Gissi-Prevenzione trial
- Is this representative of UK patients?
22Hypertension
23NICE CG 54 - Hypertension
- Offer drug therapy to patients with
- persistent high blood pressure of 160/100 mmHg or
more - persistent blood pressure above 140/90 mmHg and
raised cardiovascular risk (10-year risk of
cardiovascular disease of at least 20, existing
cardiovascular disease or target organ damage). - Aim to reduce blood pressure to 140/90 mmHg or
less, adding more drugs as needed, until further
treatment is inappropriate or declined.
24ALLHAT (JAMA 2002)
- The key message from ALLHAT is that what matters
most is getting blood pressure controlled, and
that this is overwhelmingly more important than
the means. Combinations of several drugs will be
required for most patients, and such an
antihypertensive treatment cocktail should
include a thiazide diuretic
25The Moral of the Tale
- As long as we reach the objective (130/80), it
doesnt matter how we get there
26Comparing Interventions(Clinical Evidence)
- Primary prevention, to prevent CHD / CHD death
- Tight BP control NNT 14
- Tight BG control NNT 46
- Tight BG control, metformin NNT 16
- Statin NNT 27
- Aspirin NNT 16-39
- Ramipril NNT 22
27Hypertension in Diabetes NICE 2008
- First choice antihypertensive drug is a
once-daily ACE inhibitor - (Plus a diuretic and / or calcium channel blocker
in people whose blood pressure is not controlled
to target on monotherapy) - A calcium channel blocker is recommended for
women who may become pregnant
28ARBs as effective as ACE inhibitors in CV risk
reduction? Jury still out
- The TRANSCEND study reinforces the importance of
only prescribing ARBs as an alternative to ACE
inhibitors where there is clear intolerance to
ACE inhibitors. - Lancet 2008 372 1172-83.
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32Angina - Treatment Options
- Immediate relief of symptoms
- GTN
- Long-term prevention of symptoms
- Beta-blocker
- Calcium channel blocker
- Nitrate
- Potassium channel activator
33Combination therapy
- With a maximal dose beta-blocker add
- Long acting dihydropyridine
- ISMN or nicorandil
- If a beta-blocker is contra-indicated use
- CCB add ISMN or nicorandil
- Nitrate add CCB or nicorandil
- There is no evidence that a third drug improves
symptom control
34Adverse Effects
- Antiplatelets
- Beta-blockers
- Calcium-channel blockers
- Nitrates
- Nicorandil
35Myocardial Infarction NICE CG43 May 2007
- Give low dose aspirin (75mg daily) clopidogrel
if allergy (NSTEMI / STEMI) - Give beta-blockers ALL patients EARLY for at
least 2-3 years - Give ACE inhibitors ALL patients EARLY
- Provide advice and treatment to control BP
- Give statins of low acquisition cost ASAP to
reduce cholesterol to target - Tackle other risks such as blood glucose levels,
smoking, physical activity, diet and weight
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37Are the risk reductions relative or absolute?
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39Risk (Rx) 8/100 8Risk (Pl) 12/100 12
40Relative Risk(RR) Risk (Rx)/ Risk (Pl)
.08/.12 .67 Relative Risk Reduction (RRR) 1
- RR 1- .67 .33 or 33
41Absolute Risk Reduction (ARR) Risk (Pl) - Risk
(Rx) .12 - .08 .04 or 4
42Number Needed to Treat (NNT) NNT 1/ARR
- Number of patients needed to treat to prevent one
outcome
43NNT 1/ARR
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45Check-list
- Are the risks relative or absolute?
46Check-list
- Are the risks relative or absolute?
- Relative.
- Absolute 0.9
47Check-list
- Are the risks relative or absolute? Relative
- Is the result statistically significant?
48Check-list
- Are the risks relative or absolute?
- Is the result statistically significant?
- Yes, marginally.
- P .045 95 CI (0.3 to 16.5)
49Check-list
- Are the risks relative or absolute? Relative
- Is the result statistically significant? Yes
- Is the result clinically significant?
50Check-list
- Are the risks relative or absolute? Relative
- Is the result statistically significant? Yes
- Is the result clinically significant?
- No
- NNT 1/ARR 1/.009 111 95CI (57 - 2500)
51Check-list
- Are the risks relative or absolute? Relative
- Is the result statistically significant? Yes
- Is the result clinically significant? No
- Does the size of the effect shown equal the size
of the effect in the data?
52Check-list
- Are the risks relative or absolute? Relative
- Is the result statistically significant? Yes
- Is the result clinically significant? No
- Does the size of the effect shown equal the size
of the effect in the data? No
53Check-list
- Are the risks relative or absolute? Relative
- Is the result statistically significant? Yes
- Is the result clinically significant? No
- Does the size of the effect shown equal the size
of the effect in the data? No - Are the references "real?
54Check-list
- Are the risks relative or absolute? Relative
- Is the result statistically significant? Yes
- Is the result clinically significant? No
- Does the size of the effect shown equal the size
of the effect in the data? No - Are the references "real?
- Yes, the CAPRIE study, The Lancet, Vol. 348,
November 16,1996.
55Aspirin ineffective for primary prevention in
patients with diabetes
- Belch J et al. the prevention of the progression
of arterial disease and diabetes (POPADAD) trial.
BMJ 2008 337 a1840 - This trial found aspirin was ineffective for the
primary prevention of cardiovascular (CV) events
in patients with diabetes and asymptomatic
peripheral arterial disease (a risk factor for CV
disease).
56Heart failure treatmentNICE 2003
57ACE inhibitor dosageNICE 2003
58Initiation in Heart Failure
- 1. Withhold diuretics
- 2. Initiate in the evening (or morning and
monitor BP) - 3. Start with low dose build up to recommended
or highest tolerated - 4. Stop if RF deteriorates
- 5. Avoid K-sparing diuretics NSAIDs
- 6. What to do if BP falls
- 7. What to do if cough occurs
- 8. Rarely necessary to stop treatment beware
clinical deterioration
59ACEI A2A monitoring
- Baseline
- BP, RF (urea / creatinine), electrolytes
(especially K) - Routine
- BP, RF, electrolytes (especially K)
- - 1 week after initiation
- - 1 week after dose increase
- - thereafter annually
60Modifying / Stopping ACEIs A2As
Serum creatinine increase by 50 or to
200µmol/l halve dose
Stop if Serum potassium 6mmol/l or more
Or Creatinine gt 350µmol/l
Or Creatinine increase by gt 100
61Using beta-blockersNICE 2003
62Beta blockers in Heart Failure
- 1. Should be on a background ACEI
- 2. Start low dose and titrate up to maintenance
- 3. Double dose every 2 weeks
- 4. Monitor heart rate, BP (UEs every 1-2 weeks
and 1-2 weeks after final dose reached)
- 5. Worsening HF, hypotension and bradycardia can
occur during titration - 6. Adjust treatment, but consider dose increase
when patient stable - 7. Dont stop suddenly rebound myocardial
ischaemia and arrhythmia
63Place of ARBs in HF therapy
- If truly ACEI intolerent ARB should be used
(NICE) - Adding ARB in addition to ACEI gains little. In
Val-Heft it was harmful in people on ACEI and
?-blocker. - And may increase drop out due to side effects
Pfeffer MA, et al. NEJM 2003 - CHARM-Added showed some benefits but increased
harms (in an RCT where ACEIs were said to be
optimised but were low compared with UK targets) - Adding ARB in diastolic failure not beneficial
(most already on ACEI) CHARM-Preserved
64Using spironolactoneNICE 2003
- Dose 12.525mg daily (50mg only by specialist and
no potassium problems) - Check UE at 1, 4, 8 12 weeks 6, 9 12
months 6 monthly thereafter
65Oral Anticoagulants - Uses
- Deep vein thrombosis / pulmonary embolism
- Atrial fibrillation
- Prosthetic heart valves
66Warfarin
- Baseline
- PT APTT
- Platelet count and LFT (if possible)
- Routine
- INR weekly until stable (daily for rapid
anticoagulation) - At intervals up to maximum of 3 months
- Increase frequency if response likely to change
(liver disease, illness, drug interaction)
Do you record doses and INRs ?
67INRs
- INR 2 2.5 (DVT prophylaxis)
- INR 2.5 (treatment of DVT PE, AF,
cardioversion, dilated cardiomyopathy, mural
thrombus post-MI, rheumatic valve disease) - INR 3.5 (recurrent DVT PE, prosthetic heart
valves)
68Warfarin / Diet Interactions
- Vitamin E
- Vitamin K
- Fish oils
- Avocado
- Green vegetables
- Chromium
- Coenzyme Q10
- Cranberry juice
- Ice cream
- Soya bean products
69New Patients
- Loading doses
- Consider thrombophilia screening
- Standard 10mg for 2 days (reduced in some
patient groups) - Slow induction (AF) 2 or 3mg daily
- Maintenance doses
- 3 9mg
70New Patients
- LMWH Clexane
- If patient discharged and INR less than 2.0
continue heparin until 2 consecutive readings
above 2.0. - Consider restarting heparin if INR ever falls
significantly below 2.0. - Treatment dose Clexane 1.5mg/kg/day.
71INR monitoring and dose adjustment
- Initially daily then increase frequency to a
maximum of 8 week intervals for stable patients. - INR reflect dose 48 hours ago.
- Same dose each day where possible.
- Avoid halving tablets.
72Fluctuating INRs
- Dont overreact!
- Look for obvious causes.
- Raised INR.
- E.g. diarrhoea,exacerbation of HF, LF,
hyperthroidism, weight loss, alcohol (acute),
overdose, drug interactions. - Omit 1doses as appropriate
- Usually only change maintenance dose if 2nd
episode of raised INR - Consider checking LFTs if 3rd episode
73Fluctuating INRs
- Reduced INRs
- E.g. hypothyroidism,diet (Vitamin K), weight
gain, missed doses, drug interactions, poor
compliance - Booster dose, double maintenance dose
- Usually only change maintenance dose on 2nd
episode
74Overanticoagulation- Patients at risk of bleeding
- Age over 75 years
- History of uncontrolled hypertension
- Liver disease, increased alcohol intake
- Poor drug compliance or clinic attendance
- Bleeding lesions especially GI
- Bleeding tendency (inc coagulation defects,
thrombocytopenia) or concomitant NSAIDs - New patients, INRs greater than 4.0
75Overanticoagulation - Management
- See BNF for details
- Avoid use of vitamin K in valve replacements
- Vitamin K may be used orally
- For partial reversal give 0.5 2mg orally
- Deranged clotting factors for several days with
high doses - Control of haemorrhage using vitamin k
- 1 3 hours IV
- 4 6 hours oral
- INR change lags 12 24 hours
76Discontinuing Treatment
- Stop treatment abruptly no need to tail off
- Baseline blood test after six weeks
- Counsel regarding future high risk situations
- Operations, prolonged bedrest
- Pregnancy
- Long distance travel
- Patient Information sheet
77Dental Treatment
- Dental treatment continue as long as INR 4.0.
Check blood 72 hours before treatment.
78Amiodarone
79Amiodarone
- Antiarrhythmic secondary care initiation
- Beware interactions with warfarin, beta-blockers,
calcium channel blockers, digoxin
80Amiodarone - monitoring
- Baseline
- LFTs, TFTs (TSH, T3, T4)
- Chest x-ray, lung function (BNF)
- Serum K and ECG (SPC)
- Routine
- TFTs
- Every 6 months and for some months after
discontinuation (possibly 12 months) - Hyperthyroidism discontinue (often refractory).
Hypothyroidism weigh risk / benefit (can use
thyroxine)
81Amiodarone monitoring 2
- Routine
- LFTs
- Every 6 months
- Initial rise in serum transaminases usually
resolves within 6 months (may need dose decrease) - Increase after more than 6 months treatment or
hepatomegaly indicates chronic liver disease - Eye examination
- Every 12 months
- Recommended by SPC to detect corneal
microdeposits. These are untreatable and
reversible - Beware optic neuritis and neuropathy
82Amiodarone monitoring 3
- Routine
- Chest x-ray and lung function tests
- If toxicity suspected
- Observe for dyspnoea, cough, pleuritic pain
- Aim to prevent pneumonitis (which can be fatal)
- Periodic ECGs
- Neurological symptoms
- Use of sunscreens
83Digoxin
- Baseline
- Serum creatinine (TFTs, K)
- Routine
- If on diuretic monitor K periodically (lt4mmol/l
give K-sparing diuretic) - Digoxin level (only if toxicity suspected or 1
week after adding or stopping interacting drug) - Discontinue if toxicity (usually gt3ng/ml)
- Also check potassium if toxicity suspected
84Frequency of and risk factors for preventable
medication-related hospital admissions
- Leendertse AJ et al. Arch Intern Med. 2008 168
1890-1896 - Medicines most frequently associated with the
potentially preventable admissions included those
affecting blood coagulation, NSAIDs, and
antidiabetic drugs, with a total of 509
medication errors being identified in the 332
potentially preventable medicines-related
admissions.
85Questions?
- Thank you
- Robert.Hallworth_at_nhs.net