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March 27 - Drug Therapy Boosting Heart-Attack Survival
Rates
The long-term survival of older Americans
who have heart attacks has improved steadily in recent years
and apparently is due to the drugs they are prescribed, a
new study suggests. Medicare and pharmacy
data on 21,484 residents of New Jersey and Pennsylvania who
had heart attacks showed a 3% year-by-year reduction in death
rates from 1995 to 2004, according to the study. The findings
are published in a recent issue of the Journal
of the American College of Cardiology.
After adjusting for various factors that could
cloud the results, the study authors found that the prescription
of drugs such as beta blockers, cholesterol-lowering statins,
ACE inhibitors and the like may have been the primary reason
for the improvement, says Soko Setoguchi, MD, DrPH, an associate
physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, and lead
author of the report.
The study doesn't mean that surgical interventions
such as artery-opening angioplasty have no place in the long-term
treatment of heart attack survivors, Setoguchi says. "The
way we looked at it was mortality over time," she says.
"What we found was that long-term mortality mainly was
less because of medical treatment."
Surgical interventions were relatively uncommon
in the group that was studied, Setoguchi says. Only about
25% of the heart patients had such interventions, compared
with more than 60% being prescribed beta blocker drugs, for
example, she says.
The study, which had no financial support
from the pharmaceutical industry, looked only at prescriptions,
not at whether the participants actually took the medications,
Setoguchi says. A recent study found that a fairly large percentage
of heart attack survivors did not take the medications prescribed
for them, and those who didn't fared worse than those who
did. "If you don't take the medication,
you don't get the benefit," Setoguchi says.
Surgical intervention, such as angioplasty,
clearly has a role in the early treatment of heart attack,
says David J. Maron, MD, an associate professor of medicine
and emergency medicine at Vanderbilt University, and coauthor
of an accompanying editorial in the journal. The new report
covered survival only after the first 30 days of a heart attack,
he notes.
"We know that PCI [percutaneous coronary
intervention, or angioplasty] improves survival in the acute
phase of a heart attack," Maron says. "The best
short-term therapy is reperfusion, preferably with PCI. As
a complement to that, there needs to be long-term therapy
for atherosclerosis." Reperfusion
is restoration of blood flow to the heart. Atherosclerosis
is the artery-hardening process that leads to blockage of
blood vessels.
Setoguchi agrees. A separate analysis of in-hospital
deaths in the group of patients studied showed that "increased
use of PCI might have explained the improvement in short-term
mortality," she says.
Source: Journal of the American College
of Cardiology
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