Persistence and determinants of statin therapy among middle‐aged patients for primary and secondary prevention

Aims Statins have been shown to significantly reduce morbidity and mortality in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), and also in patients with dyslipidaemia when statins are taken regularly. Middle‐aged patients have the highest level of forecasting benefit and little is known about persiste...

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Published inBritish journal of clinical pharmacology Vol. 59; no. 5; pp. 564 - 573
Main Authors Perreault, S., Blais, L., Lamarre, D., Dragomir, A., Berbiche, D., Lalonde, L., Laurier, C., St‐Maurice, F., Collin, J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Science Ltd 01.05.2005
Blackwell Science
Blackwell Science Inc
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Abstract Aims Statins have been shown to significantly reduce morbidity and mortality in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), and also in patients with dyslipidaemia when statins are taken regularly. Middle‐aged patients have the highest level of forecasting benefit and little is known about persistence rate of these therapies in a real‐life setting. The objective was to evaluate the persistence rate of middle‐aged patients initiating a statin therapy and its relation with several determinants for primary and secondary prevention. Methods A cohort was reconstructed using the RAMQ databases. All patients aged 50–64 years‐old who received at least one statin prescription between 1 January, 1998 and 31 December, 2000 for a new intention of treatment for dyslipidaemia were included in the cohort and followed up until 30 June, 2001. The date of the first prescription of statin was defined as the index date. There were 4316 patients in the secondary prevention (CAD diagnosis) and 13 642 patients in primary prevention cohort. The cumulative persistence rate was estimated using Kaplan‐Meier, and Cox regression models were used to estimate the hazard ratio of ceasing statins. Results We found that persistence with statins had fallen to 71% after 6 months of treatment, and had declined to 45% after 3 years in the secondary prevention cohort; the corresponding figures were 65% and 35% in the primary prevention cohort. Our results suggest that patients with dyslipidaemia in primary prevention compared with those in secondary prevention (HR: 1.18; 1.11–1.25) are less likely to be persistent. Patients with other cardiovascular risk factors such as age (HR: 0.99; 0.98–0.99), diabetes (HR: 0.84; 0.79–0.90), hypertension (HR: 0.76; 0.72–0.80) were most likely to be persistent with statins. We observed lower persistence in patients who have used the greatest number of pharmacies and prescribing physicians. Conclusion This analysis indicates that barriers to persistence occur early in the therapeutic course. Overall persistence with statins is low, and particularly among patients with few other cardiovascular risk factors.
AbstractList AIMSStatins have been shown to significantly reduce morbidity and mortality in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), and also in patients with dyslipidaemia when statins are taken regularly. Middle-aged patients have the highest level of forecasting benefit and little is known about persistence rate of these therapies in a real-life setting. The objective was to evaluate the persistence rate of middle-aged patients initiating a statin therapy and its relation with several determinants for primary and secondary prevention.METHODSA cohort was reconstructed using the RAMQ databases. All patients aged 50-64 years-old who received at least one statin prescription between 1 January, 1998 and 31 December, 2000 for a new intention of treatment for dyslipidaemia were included in the cohort and followed up until 30 June, 2001. The date of the first prescription of statin was defined as the index date. There were 4316 patients in the secondary prevention (CAD diagnosis) and 13,642 patients in primary prevention cohort. The cumulative persistence rate was estimated using Kaplan-Meier, and Cox regression models were used to estimate the hazard ratio of ceasing statins.RESULTSWe found that persistence with statins had fallen to 71% after 6 months of treatment, and had declined to 45% after 3 years in the secondary prevention cohort; the corresponding figures were 65% and 35% in the primary prevention cohort. Our results suggest that patients with dyslipidaemia in primary prevention compared with those in secondary prevention (HR: 1.18; 1.11-1.25) are less likely to be persistent. Patients with other cardiovascular risk factors such as age (HR: 0.99; 0.98-0.99), diabetes (HR: 0.84; 0.79-0.90), hypertension (HR: 0.76; 0.72-0.80) were most likely to be persistent with statins. We observed lower persistence in patients who have used the greatest number of pharmacies and prescribing physicians.CONCLUSIONThis analysis indicates that barriers to persistence occur early in the therapeutic course. Overall persistence with statins is low, and particularly among patients with few other cardiovascular risk factors.
Statins have been shown to significantly reduce morbidity and mortality in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), and also in patients with dyslipidaemia when statins are taken regularly. Middle-aged patients have the highest level of forecasting benefit and little is known about persistence rate of these therapies in a real-life setting. The objective was to evaluate the persistence rate of middle-aged patients initiating a statin therapy and its relation with several determinants for primary and secondary prevention. A cohort was reconstructed using the RAMQ databases. All patients aged 50-64 years-old who received at least one statin prescription between 1 January, 1998 and 31 December, 2000 for a new intention of treatment for dyslipidaemia were included in the cohort and followed up until 30 June, 2001. The date of the first prescription of statin was defined as the index date. There were 4316 patients in the secondary prevention (CAD diagnosis) and 13,642 patients in primary prevention cohort. The cumulative persistence rate was estimated using Kaplan-Meier, and Cox regression models were used to estimate the hazard ratio of ceasing statins. We found that persistence with statins had fallen to 71% after 6 months of treatment, and had declined to 45% after 3 years in the secondary prevention cohort; the corresponding figures were 65% and 35% in the primary prevention cohort. Our results suggest that patients with dyslipidaemia in primary prevention compared with those in secondary prevention (HR: 1.18; 1.11-1.25) are less likely to be persistent. Patients with other cardiovascular risk factors such as age (HR: 0.99; 0.98-0.99), diabetes (HR: 0.84; 0.79-0.90), hypertension (HR: 0.76; 0.72-0.80) were most likely to be persistent with statins. We observed lower persistence in patients who have used the greatest number of pharmacies and prescribing physicians. This analysis indicates that barriers to persistence occur early in the therapeutic course. Overall persistence with statins is low, and particularly among patients with few other cardiovascular risk factors.
Aims Statins have been shown to significantly reduce morbidity and mortality in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), and also in patients with dyslipidaemia when statins are taken regularly. Middle‐aged patients have the highest level of forecasting benefit and little is known about persistence rate of these therapies in a real‐life setting. The objective was to evaluate the persistence rate of middle‐aged patients initiating a statin therapy and its relation with several determinants for primary and secondary prevention. Methods A cohort was reconstructed using the RAMQ databases. All patients aged 50–64 years‐old who received at least one statin prescription between 1 January, 1998 and 31 December, 2000 for a new intention of treatment for dyslipidaemia were included in the cohort and followed up until 30 June, 2001. The date of the first prescription of statin was defined as the index date. There were 4316 patients in the secondary prevention (CAD diagnosis) and 13 642 patients in primary prevention cohort. The cumulative persistence rate was estimated using Kaplan‐Meier, and Cox regression models were used to estimate the hazard ratio of ceasing statins. Results We found that persistence with statins had fallen to 71% after 6 months of treatment, and had declined to 45% after 3 years in the secondary prevention cohort; the corresponding figures were 65% and 35% in the primary prevention cohort. Our results suggest that patients with dyslipidaemia in primary prevention compared with those in secondary prevention (HR: 1.18; 1.11–1.25) are less likely to be persistent. Patients with other cardiovascular risk factors such as age (HR: 0.99; 0.98–0.99), diabetes (HR: 0.84; 0.79–0.90), hypertension (HR: 0.76; 0.72–0.80) were most likely to be persistent with statins. We observed lower persistence in patients who have used the greatest number of pharmacies and prescribing physicians. Conclusion This analysis indicates that barriers to persistence occur early in the therapeutic course. Overall persistence with statins is low, and particularly among patients with few other cardiovascular risk factors.
Author Blais, L.
Berbiche, D.
Dragomir, A.
Perreault, S.
Lamarre, D.
Laurier, C.
Lalonde, L.
Collin, J.
St‐Maurice, F.
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Issue 5
Keywords Human
Prevention
Secondary
determinants
Treatment
secondary prevention
statin
primary prevention
persistence
Statin derivative
Language English
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Snippet Aims Statins have been shown to significantly reduce morbidity and mortality in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), and also in patients with...
Statins have been shown to significantly reduce morbidity and mortality in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), and also in patients with dyslipidaemia...
AIMSStatins have been shown to significantly reduce morbidity and mortality in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), and also in patients with...
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StartPage 564
SubjectTerms Biological and medical sciences
Cohort Studies
Coronary Artery Disease - prevention & control
determinants
Humans
Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors - therapeutic use
Hyperlipidemias - prevention & control
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
persistence
Pharmacoepidemiology
Pharmacology. Drug treatments
primary prevention
secondary prevention
statin
Title Persistence and determinants of statin therapy among middle‐aged patients for primary and secondary prevention
URI https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111%2Fj.1365-2125.2005.02355.x
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15842555
https://search.proquest.com/docview/67759620
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PMC1884848
Volume 59
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