| Literature DB >> 25405478 |
Richard Lowrie1, Suzanne M Lloyd2, Alex McConnachie2, Jill Morrison3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Small trials with short term follow up suggest pharmacists' interventions targeted at healthcare professionals can improve prescribing. In comparison with clinical guidance, contemporary statin prescribing is sub-optimal and achievement of cholesterol targets falls short of accepted standards, for patients with atherosclerotic vascular disease who are at highest absolute risk and who stand to obtain greatest benefit. We hypothesised that a pharmacist-led complex intervention delivered to doctors and nurses in primary care, would improve statin prescribing and achievement of cholesterol targets for incident and prevalent patients with vascular disease, beyond one year.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25405478 PMCID: PMC4236200 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0113370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Baseline patient characteristics.
| SOS (15 practices; n = 2373 patients) | Usual Care (15 practices; n = 1667 patients) | P-value | |
| Age (years; mean (SD) | 68.2 (12.1) | 68.5 (12.0) | 0.311 |
| Sex, male | 1207/2373 (52.9%) | 890/1667 (53.4%) | 0.192 |
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| Angina/Ischaemic Heart Disease | 1170/2373 (49.3%) | 674/1667 (40.4%) | <0.001 |
| Diabetes Mellitus, age ≥45 years | 825/2373 (34.8%) | 647/1667 (38.8%) | 0.342 |
| Myocardial Infarction | 495/2373 (20.8%) | 355/1667 (21.2%) | 0.332 |
| Cerebrovascular event | 334/2373 (14.1%) | 236/1667 (14.1%) | 0.112 |
| Peripheral Vascular Disease | 286/2373 (12.0%) | 161/1667 (9.6%) | 0.202 |
| Transient Ischaemic Attack | 223/2373 (9.4%) | 121/1667 (7.2%) | 0.162 |
| Coronary Artery Bypass Graft | 200/2373 (8.4%) | 144/1667 (8.6%) | 0.542 |
| Angioplasty | 104/2373 (4.4%) | 67/1667 (4.0%) | 0.672 |
| Vascular co-morbidities (mean (SD) | 1.53 (0.8) | 1.44 (0.7) | <0.001 |
| Vascular co-morbidities excepting angina | 0.81 (0.7) | 0.84 (0.7) | 0.761 |
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| Cholesterol target achieved | 878/1768 (49.7%) | 680/1307 (52.0%) | 0.482 |
| Simvastatin 40 mg and target cholesterol achieved | 91/2373 | 72/1667 | 0.432 |
| Cholesterol level (mean, SD) | 5.08 mmol/l (1.1 mmol/l) | 5.01 mmol/l (1.1 mmol/l) | 0.141 |
| Prescribed Simvastatin 40 mg | 211/2373 (8.9%) | 157/1667 (9.4%) | 0.892 |
| Prescribed Simvastatin any dose | 529/2373 (22.3%) | 443/1667 (26.6%) | 0.152 |
| Prescribed any statin | 917/2373 (38.6%) | 738/1667 (44.3%) | <0.001 |
| Cholesterol tested | 1768/2373 (74.5%) | 1307/1667 (78.4%) | 0.012 |
| Cholesterol level, all patients with a statin | 4.79 mmol/l (1.2 mmol/l) | 4.71 mmol/l (1.1 mmol/l) | 0.201 |
| Cholesterol level, all patients without a statin | 5.11 mmol/l (1.1 mmol/l) | 5.08 mmol/l (1.0 mmol/l) | 0.821 |
| Statin prescribed at optimal dose | 520/2373 (21.9%) | 408/1667 (24.5%) | <0.001 |
Figure 1Trial profile.
Primary and secondary outcomes.
| Outcome | SOS(15 practices; n = 4234 patients) | Usual Care(15 practices; n = 3352 patients) | ICC | Planned analysis | Age & sex adjusted | ||
| Treatment effect(95% CI) | P-value | Treatment effect(95% CI) | P-value | ||||
| Cholesterol target achieved | 2942 (69.5%) | 2130 (63.5%) | 0.005 | 1.11 (1.00, 1.23) | 0.043 | 1.12 (1.01, 1.25) | 0.027 |
| Prescribed simvastatin 40 mg and targetcholesterol achieved | 1898 (44.8%) | 935 (27.9%) | 0.024 | 1.78 (1.61, 1.98) | <0.001 | 1.81 (1.63, 2.01) | <0.001 |
| Cholesterol level (mmol/l)* | 4.22 | 4.36 | 0.038 | 0.98 (0.97, 0.99) | 0.004 | 0.98 (0.97, 1.00) | 0.006 |
| Prescribed simvastatin 40 mg | 2497 (59.0%) | 1267 (37.8%) | 0.025 | 2.06 (1.87, 2.28) | <0.001 | 2.12 (1.92, 2.34) | <0.001 |
| Prescribed any statin | 3682 (87.0%) | 2509 (74.9%) | 0.014 | 1.82 (1.60, 2.06) | <0.001 | 1.87 (1.65, 2.13) | <0.001 |
| Cholesterol tested | 3892 (91.9%) | 2945 (87.9%) | 0.050 | 1.30 (1.11, 1.54) | 0.002 | 1.33 (1.13, 1.57) | <0.001 |
For binary outcomes, summaries are presented as number (percent) and treatment effects as odds ratios (SOS vs Usual Care) with corresponding 95% confidence intervals estimated from logistic regression models, adjusted for matched pairs. For continuous outcomes (*), summaries are presented as geometric means and treatment effects are presented as ratios (SOS vs Usual Care) with corresponding 95% confidence intervals estimated from linear regression models of the logged values, adjusted for matched pairs.
Primary and secondary outcomes in incident and prevalent patients.
| Prevalent prescribing (30 practices; n = 5660 patients) | Incident prescribing (30 practices; n = 1926 patients) | P-value forinteraction | |||||||
| Outcome | SOS(15 practices: n = 3235) | Usual Care(15 practices: n = 2425) | Treatmenteffect (95% CI) | P-value | SOS(15 practices;n = 999) | Usual Care(15 practices;n = 927) | Treatmenteffect(95% CI) | P-value | |
| Cholesterol target achieved | 2305 (71.3%) | 1565 (64.5%) | 1.19 (1.05, 1.34) | 0.005 | 637 (63.8%) | 565 (60.9%) | 0.92 (0.76, 1.11) | 0.381 | 0.025 |
| Prescribed simvastatin 40 mg & targetcholesterol achieved | 1485 (45.9%) | 688 (28.4%) | 1.89 (1.68, 2.13) | <0.001 | 414 (41.4%) | 247 (26.6%) | 1.51 (1.23–1.84) | <0.001 | 0.056 |
| Cholesterol level (mmol/l)* | 4.19 | 4.33 | 0.97 (0.96, 0.98) | <0.001 | 4.31 | 4.44 | 0.97 (0.95, 0.99) | 0.006 | 0.920 |
| Prescribed simvastatin 40 mg | 1918 (59.3%) | 923 (38.1%) | 2.16 (1.92, 2.42) | <0.001 | 579 (58.0%) | 344 (37.1%) | 1.82 (1.50, 2.21) | <0.001 | 0.140 |
| Prescribed any statin | 2878 (89.0%) | 1868 77.0%) | 2.00 (1.72, 2.33) | <0.001 | 804 (80.5%) | 641 (69.1%) | 1.43 (1.14, 1.78) | 0.002 | 0.013 |
| Cholesterol tested | 3008 (93.0%) | 2137 (88.1%) | 1.58 (1.30, 1.92) | <0.001 | 884 (88.5%) | 808 (87.2%) | 0.80 (0.60, 1.08) | 0.140 | <0.001 |
For binary outcomes, summaries are presented as number (percent) and treatment effects as odds ratios (SOS vs Usual Care) with corresponding 95% confidence intervals estimated from logistic regression models, adjusted for matched pairs. For continuous outcomes (*), summaries are presented as geometric means and treatment effects are presented as ratios (SOS vs Usual Care) with corresponding 95% confidence intervals estimated from linear regression models of the logged values, adjusted for matched pairs.
Range of primary and secondary outcomes.
| Outcome | SOS (15 practices; n = 4234 patients)N (%; range) | Usual care (15 practices; n = 3352 patients)N (%; range) |
| Cholesterol target achieved | 2942 (69.5%; 49.0–77.5%) | 2130 (63.5%; 35.6–83.4%) |
| Simvastatin 40 mg and cholesterol target achieved | 1898 (44.8%; 27.4–56.5%) | 935 (27.9%; 6.4–55.6%) |
| Cholesterol level (mmol/l) | 4.22 (4.03–4.49) | 4.36 (3.82–4.95) |
| Prescribed simvastatin 40 mg | 2497 (59.0%; 30.7–71.8%) | 1267 (37.8%; 15.2–65.7%) |
| Prescribed any statin | 3682 (87.0%; 68.0–93.7%) | 2509 (74.9%; 47.1–93.8%) |
| Cholesterol tested | 3892 (91.9%; 73.3–98.8%) | 2945 (87.9%; 65.8–97.4%) |
Cholesterol level given as geometric mean (range) mmol/l.
Figure 2Long term Simvastatin 40 mg prescribing in Intervention vs. Usual Care practices.