ACEi/ARB after STEMI: prognostic impact and predictors of adherence, results from the real-world FAST STEMI registry

M. Troncone,F. Giacobbe, U. Annone, G. Giannino, M. Nebiolo, U. Di Vita, L. Falorni, A. Morena, L. Carmagnola, O. De Filippo, F. Bruno, F. D'ascenzo, L. Gaido, M. Gianmaria, G. M. De Ferrari

European Heart Journal(2023)

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摘要
Abstract Background The impact of adherence to angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEi) and angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs) therapy on cardiovascular outcomes after ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction (STEMI) in real-world patients is understudied. Purpose To identify predictors of lower compliance to ACEi/ARBs and estimate its impact on cardiovascular outcomes and mortality in the first year after the index event. Methods We evaluated real-world adherence to the most common cardiovascular drugs by comparing the number of bought tablets in pharmacies to the expected tablets at 1 year and on total follow-up length. A total of 6043 patients with STEMI from 2012 to 2017 were enrolled in the FAST-STEMI registry and followed up for 4.7±1.6 years. 299 patients with intraprocedural and intrahospital deaths were excluded. The main outcomes evaluated were all-cause death, cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, major and minor bleeding events and ischemic stroke. The optimal compliance cutoff was found by ROC curve analysis with Youden index; Kaplan Meier and Cox proportional hazard models were performed to evaluate cumulative event rates of mortality at follow-up. Predictors of lower adherence were evaluated at univariate and multivariate analysis with logistic regression. Results A total of 4167 patients with ACEi/ARBs prescription at discharge were considered: mean age was 64 ± 12 years old, 77.3% were men, 18.4% had hypertension, 12% were diabetic, 3.8% had previous coronary artery disease (CAD), mean ejection fraction (EF) was 49.21%±8.9%. Mean ACEi/ARBs adherence was 84.4% (IQR 57.5-99.8): after univariate and multivariate analysis, predictors of lower compliance were age ³75 years old (OR 0.822, 95%CI 0.697-0.970) and known ischemic cardiopathy (OR 0.592, 95%CI 0.422-0.831), whereas preserved EF (OR 1.197, 95%CI 1.048-1.368), hypertension (OR 1.339, 95%CI 1.114-1.609) and beta-blockers prescription at discharge (OR 1.442, 95%CI 1.155-1.802) were predictors of good adherence. ACEi/ARBs compliance higher than 72.06% (identified at Youden’s analysis as best cut-off) was found both at univariate and multivariate analysis as a predictor of lower cardiovascular (0.3% vs 2.6%, HR 0.17, 95%CI 0.07-0.36, p<0.001) and all-cause mortality (1.5% vs 5.9%, HR 0.34, 95%CI 0.23-0.51, p<0.001). Finally, ACEi/ARBs optimal compliance at 1-year was associated to a reduction of myocardial infarctions (7.7% vs 10.4%, p=0.02), as well as minor bleedings (0.2% vs 0.7%, p=0.01), whilst did not impact on ischemic stroke nor major bleedings. Conclusions In our large real-world registry, good adherence to ACEi/ARBs therapy after acute myocardial infarction with ST-elevation was associated with a reduction in mortality (either cardiovascular and all-cause), myocardial infarctions and minor bleedings. Older age and previous coronary artery disease resulted as predictors of poor compliance to ACEi/ARBs therapy.
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stemi,adherence,prognostic impact,acei/arb,real-world
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