Despite substantial
progress in the diagnosis and treatment of heart attack patients,
prevention of recurrent heart attacks continues to be a major clinical
challenge. A new study showed that patients who suffered a non-fatal heart
attack within the first three months of hospitalization for chest pain had
a significantly higher risk for dying or having another heart attack (in
the following three months to four years) compared with patients who did
not experience a heart attack during the same initial period. The findings
from the more-than-15,000- patient study were presented today at the annual
meeting of the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes
Research (ISPOR), November 8-11.
In the study, patients who suffered a heart attack during the first
three months after hospital admission for coronary artery disease compared
with those who did not experience a heart attack during the same period
were 62 percent (p <0.001) more likely to die and 84 percent (p < 0.001) more
likely to have an additional heart attack or death within four years. The
increased rate of heart attack and death among patients who had a heart
attack remained similar even when the monitoring was extended from a
three-to-six month period. The researchers found that patients who suffered
a heart attack within the six month period were 61 percent (p<0.001) more
likely to die, and 86 percent (p<0.001) were more likely to suffer a
recurrent heart attack or death over a four-year period compared with those
who did not experience a heart attack.
"This study illustrated that heart attack patients may still suffer
severe, life-threatening events over the next several years, even if they
appear well," said study investigator David F. Kong, M.D., assistant
professor of medicine, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Duke University
Medical Center & Duke Clinical Research Institute, Durham, N.C., USA.
"Surviving an initial heart attack does not mean that a patient is 'out of
the woods'. Earlier diagnosis and interventions to help prevent heart
attacks could improve long-term outcomes for patients."
The Study
The study analyzed 15,604 patients with significant coronary heart
disease undergoing diagnostic catheterization, a procedure in which a thin
plastic tube is inserted into an artery to take pictures of the blood
vessels that supply the heart. Patients were classified as having a
non-fatal heart attack within three months of their first catheterization
in a hospital or as being event-free within the three-month period. The
median follow-up time for both groups was 4.2 years.
In the retrospective analysis, patients in the heart attack vs. no
heart attack group were similar in age (median of 62 vs. 63), female sex
(36 percent vs. 33 percent), history of hypertension (69 percent vs. 68
percent), history of diabetes (36 percent vs. 30 percent) and multi-vessel
coronary artery disease (61 percent vs. 58 percent). The median follow-up
time for both groups was 4.2 years.
The study was conducted at Duke Clinical Research Institute, part of
Duke University Medical Center, by Eric Eisenstein, D.B.A., Patricia
Cowper, Ph.D., David Kong, M.D., and Kevin Anstrom, Ph.D., with support
from the Health Outcomes groups at Daiichi Sankyo and Lilly.
Coronary Heart Disease
As one of the primary forms of cardiovascular disease, coronary heart
disease occurs when the coronary arteries become narrowed or clogged by
cholesterol and fat deposits inside the arteries through a process called
atherosclerosis. Heart attacks are a major manifestation of coronary heart
disease, which constitutes an enormous health burden throughout the world.
Annually, 3.8 million men and 3.4 million women worldwide die from coronary
heart disease.(1) The rates of death in coronary heart disease patients are
particularly high. Of all patients who die within 28 days after the onset
of symptoms, approximately two-thirds die before reaching the hospital.(2)
Long- term prevention of heart attacks and further cardiac events in
patients who already experienced a non-fatal heart attack is crucial to
improve the lives of coronary heart disease patients.
Daiichi Sankyo
A global pharma innovator, Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd., was established in
2005 through the merger of two leading Japanese pharmaceutical companies.
This integration created a more robust organization that allows for
continuous development of novel drugs that enrich the quality of life for
patients around the world. A central focus of Daiichi Sankyo's research and
development is cardiovascular disease, including therapies for
dyslipidemia, hypertension, diabetes, and acute coronary syndrome. Equally
important to the company is the discovery of new medicines in the areas of
infectious diseases, cancer, bone and joint diseases, and immune disorders.
Eli Lilly and Company
Lilly, a leading innovation-driven corporation, is developing a growing
portfolio of first-in-class and best-in-class pharmaceutical products by
applying the latest research from its own worldwide laboratories and from
collaborations with eminent scientific organizations. Headquartered in
Indianapolis, Ind., Lilly provides answers - through medicines and
information - for some of the world's most urgent medical needs.
O-LLY
(1) World Health Organization. The Atlas of Heart Disease and Stroke -
Deaths from Coronary Heart Disease. 2005.
(2) World Health Organization. The Atlas of Heart Disease and Stroke -
Deaths from Coronary Heart Disease. World Health Organization, 2005.
SOURCE Eli Lilly and Company