Observational study of the medical management of patients with peripheral artery disease

Author:

Saratzis A1ORCID,Jaspers N E M2,Gwilym B3,Thomas O3,Tsui A3,Lefroy R3,Parks M3,Htun V3,Mera Z3,Thatcher A3,Bosanquet D3ORCID,Forsythe R3ORCID,Benson R3ORCID,Dattani N3,Dovell G3,Lane T3,Shalhoub J3,Sidloff D3ORCID,Visseren F L J2,Dorresteijn J A N2,Richards T4,

Affiliation:

1. National Institute for Health Research Leicester Biomedical Research Centre, Leicester, UK

2. Department of Vascular Medicine, University Medical Centre Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands

3. Vascular and Endovascular Research Network, Birmingham, UK

4. Department of Vascular Surgery, University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Background Previous research has suggested that patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD) are not offered adequate risk factor modification, despite their high cardiovascular risk. The aim of this study was to assess the cardiovascular profiles of patients with PAD and quantify the survival benefits of target-based risk factor modification. Methods The Vascular and Endovascular Research Network (VERN) prospectively collected cardiovascular profiles of patients with PAD from ten UK vascular centres (April to June 2018) to assess practice against UK and European goal-directed best medical therapy guidelines. Risk and benefits of risk factor control were estimated using the SMART-REACH model, a validated cardiovascular prediction tool for patients with PAD. Results Some 440 patients (mean(s.d.) age 70(11) years, 24·8 per cent women) were included in the study. Mean(s.d.) cholesterol (4·3(1·2) mmol/l) and LDL-cholesterol (2·7(1·1) mmol/l) levels were above recommended targets; 319 patients (72·5 per cent) were hypertensive and 343 (78·0 per cent) were active smokers. Only 11·1 per cent of patients were prescribed high-dose statin therapy and 39·1 per cent an antithrombotic agent. The median calculated risk of a major cardiovascular event over 10 years was 53 (i.q.r. 44–62) per cent. Controlling all modifiable cardiovascular risk factors based on UK and European guidance targets (LDL-cholesterol less than 2 mmol/l, systolic BP under 140 mmHg, smoking cessation, antiplatelet therapy) would lead to an absolute risk reduction of the median 10-year cardiovascular risk by 29 (20–38) per cent with 6·3 (4·0–9·3) cardiovascular disease-free years gained. Conclusion The medical management of patients with PAD in this secondary care cohort was suboptimal. Controlling modifiable risk factors to guideline-based targets would confer significant patient benefit.

Funder

Amgen

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

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