Aims Patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) are at very high risk of recurrent events. A strategy to reduce excess risk might be to deliver structured secondary prevention programmes, but their efficacy has been mostly evaluated in the short term and in experimental settings. This is a retrospective case–control study aimed at assessing, in the real world, the efficacy of a secondary prevention programme in reducing long-term coronary event recurrences after coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG). Methods Programme participants (henceforth ‘cases’) were men and women aged <75 years subjected to CABG between and results 2002 and 2014, living within 100 km of the hospital. Key programme actions included optimization of treatments according to the most updated European preventive guidelines, surveillance of therapy adherence, and customized lifestyle counselling. Controls were analogous patients not involved in the programme because living farther than 100 km away, matched 1:1 with cases for gender, age at CABG, and year of CABG. Both groups (n = 1248) underwent usual periodic cardiology follow-up at our centre. Data on symptomatic or silent CHD recurrences were obtained from the hospital electronic health records. Cox analysis (adjusted for baseline differences between groups) shows that programme participation was associated with a significantly lower incidence throughout 5 years post-CABG of symptomatic [hazard ratio (95% confidence interval): 0.59 (0.38–0.94)] and silent [0.53 (0.31–0.89)] coronary recurrences. Conclusion In a real-world setting, taking part in a structured longstanding secondary prevention programme, in addition to usual cardiology care, meaningfully lowers the risk of coronary recurrences.

Long-term secondary cardiovascular prevention programme in patients subjected to coronary artery bypass surgery / J. Pablo Werba, A. Bonomi, M. Giroli, M. Amato, L. Vigo, M. Agrifoglio, F. Alamanni, L. Cavallotti, S. Kassem, M. Naliato, A. Parolari, E. Penza, G. Polvani, G. Pompilio, M. Porqueddu, M. Roberto, S. Salis, M. Zanobini, M. Amato, D. Baldassarre, F. Veglia, E. Tremoli. - In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE CARDIOLOGY. - ISSN 2047-4873. - 29:7(2022), pp. 060.997-060.1004. [10.1093/eurjpc/zwaa060]

Long-term secondary cardiovascular prevention programme in patients subjected to coronary artery bypass surgery

M. Giroli;M. Agrifoglio;F. Alamanni;A. Parolari;G. Polvani;G. Pompilio;D. Baldassarre;
2022

Abstract

Aims Patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) are at very high risk of recurrent events. A strategy to reduce excess risk might be to deliver structured secondary prevention programmes, but their efficacy has been mostly evaluated in the short term and in experimental settings. This is a retrospective case–control study aimed at assessing, in the real world, the efficacy of a secondary prevention programme in reducing long-term coronary event recurrences after coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG). Methods Programme participants (henceforth ‘cases’) were men and women aged <75 years subjected to CABG between and results 2002 and 2014, living within 100 km of the hospital. Key programme actions included optimization of treatments according to the most updated European preventive guidelines, surveillance of therapy adherence, and customized lifestyle counselling. Controls were analogous patients not involved in the programme because living farther than 100 km away, matched 1:1 with cases for gender, age at CABG, and year of CABG. Both groups (n = 1248) underwent usual periodic cardiology follow-up at our centre. Data on symptomatic or silent CHD recurrences were obtained from the hospital electronic health records. Cox analysis (adjusted for baseline differences between groups) shows that programme participation was associated with a significantly lower incidence throughout 5 years post-CABG of symptomatic [hazard ratio (95% confidence interval): 0.59 (0.38–0.94)] and silent [0.53 (0.31–0.89)] coronary recurrences. Conclusion In a real-world setting, taking part in a structured longstanding secondary prevention programme, in addition to usual cardiology care, meaningfully lowers the risk of coronary recurrences.
Coronary artery bypass graft; Coronary heart disease; Implementation research; Real world; Secondary cardiovascular prevention
Settore MED/23 - Chirurgia Cardiaca
2022
21-nov-2020
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/959464
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