Effect of selected clinical trial publication on adjunctive nonstatin medication prescribing in the Veterans Health Administration system

PURPOSEThe question of whether publication of selected clinical trials is temporally followed by changes in prescribing of adjunctive lipid-lowering medications was evaluated. METHODSIn this retrospective preanalysis and postanalysis, Veterans Health Administration (VHA) patients 18 years or older w...

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Published inAmerican journal of health-system pharmacy Vol. 73; no. 23 Suppl 6; pp. S141 - S147
Main Authors Titus-Rains, Krystal S, Cantrell, Matthew A, Egge, Jason A, Alexander, Bruce, Shaw, Robert F, Argo, Tami R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Copyright American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, Inc. All rights reserved 01.12.2016
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Summary:PURPOSEThe question of whether publication of selected clinical trials is temporally followed by changes in prescribing of adjunctive lipid-lowering medications was evaluated. METHODSIn this retrospective preanalysis and postanalysis, Veterans Health Administration (VHA) patients 18 years or older who received a new or renewed order for any lipid-lowering medication between April 2, 2004, and September 2, 2014, were included. This period was chosen based on the publication dates of three trials investigating the efficacy of nonstatin medicationsSimvastatin with or without Ezetimibe in Familial Hypercholesterolemia (ENHANCE, April 3, 2008), Effects of Combination Lipid Therapy in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (ACCORD Lipid, March 14, 2010), and Niacin in Patients with Low HDL Cholesterol Levels Receiving Intensive Statin Therapy (AIM-HIGH, December 15, 2011). Annual prescribing rates for ezetimibe, fibrates, and niacin were analyzed for 4 years before and after the ENHANCE, ACCORD, and AIM-HIGH trial publication dates, respectively (3 years for niacin in AIM-HIGH) and reported as percent of patients in the cohort. RESULTSAmong patients receiving lipid-lowering medications, relatively low overall prescribing rates were observed for all three target medications. Prescribing rates for each medication decreased after its respective trial publication, with ezetimibe having the greatest change. CONCLUSIONPrescribing of fibrates, niacin, and ezetimibe in the VHA system decreased after the publication of landmark trials assessing their addition to a statin, consistent with the recommendations in the 2013 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) guideline, which did not encourage routine use of adjunctive therapies to lower the risk of cardiovascular disease.
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ISSN:1079-2082
1535-2900
DOI:10.2146/ajhp150665