Impact of cardiac rehabilitation on 3 year outcomes amongst patients after acute coronary syndrome: (ACS) SNAPSHOT ACS follow-up study

Author:

Redfern J1,Hyun K1,Brieger D2,Chew D3,French J4,Astley C5,Gallagher R6,Ellis C7,Carr B8,Lefkovits J9,Nallaiah K10,Lintern K11,Neubeck L12,Briffa T13

Affiliation:

1. University of Sydney, Westmead Applied Research Centre, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney, Australia

2. ANZAC Research Institute, Sydney, Australia

3. Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia

4. University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

5. South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, Adelaide, Australia

6. University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

7. Auckland City Hospital, Auckland, New Zealand

8. NSW Agency for Clinical Innovation, Sydney, Australia

9. Monash University, Melbourne, Australia

10. The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney, Australia

11. South Western Sydney Local Health District, Sydney, Australia

12. Napier University, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

13. University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Background Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of disease burden globally. With advancements in medical and surgical care more people are surviving initial acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and are in need of secondary prevention and cardiac rehabilitation (CR). Increasing availability of high quality individual-level data linkage provides robust estimates of outcomes long-term. Purpose To compare 3 year outcomes amongst ACS survivors who did and did not participate in Australian CR programs. Methods SNAPSHOT ACS follow-up study included 1806 patients admitted to 232 hospitals who were followed-up by data linkage (cross-jurisdictional morbidity, national death index, Pharmaceutical Benefit Schedule) at 6 and 36 months to compare those who did/not attend CR. Results In total, the cohort had a mean age of 65.8 (13.4) years, 60% were male, only 25% (461/1806) attended CR. During index admission, attendees were more likely to have had PCI (39% v 14%, p<0.001), CABG (11% v 2%, p<0.001) and a diagnosis of STEMI (21% v 5%, p<0.001) than those who did not attend. However, there was no significant difference between CR attendees/non-attendees for risk factors (LDL-cholesterol, smoking, obesity). Only 19% of eligible women attended CR compared to 30% of men (p<0.001). At 36 months, there were fewer deaths amongst CR attendees (19/461, 4.1%) than non-attendees (116/1345, 8.6%) (p=0.001). CR attendees were more likely to have repeat ACS, PCI, CABG at both 6 and 36 months (Table). At 36 months, CR attendees were more likely to have been prescribed antiplatelets (78% v 53%, p<0.001), statins (91% 73%, p<0.001), beta-blockers (11% v 13%, p=0.002) and ACEI/ARBs (72% v 61%, p<0.001) than non-attendees. Conclusions Amongst Australian ACS survivors, participation in CR was associated with less likelihood of death and increased prescription of pharmacotherapy. However, attendance at CR was associated with higher rates of repeat ACS and revascularisation. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: Foundation. Main funding source(s): New South Wales Cardiovascular Research Network, National Heart Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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