The findings of an international study led by Hamilton researchers suggest that combination therapy of aspirin, statins and at least two blood pressure medications given in fixed doses can slash the risk of fatal cardiovascular disease (CVD) by more than half.
The study was published by the journal The Lancet and concurrently presented at the European Society of Cardiology Congress by Joseph.
The fixed-dose combination (FDC) therapies were examined both with and without aspirin versus control groups in a combined analysis of more than 18,000 patients without prior CVD from three large clinical trials. FDCs including aspirin cut the risk of heart attacks by 53 per cent, stroke by 51 per cent, and deaths from cardiovascular causes by 49 per cent.
The results were welcomed by international leaders in cardiovascular research.
Approximately 19 million people worldwide die of CVD and twice as many experience heart attacks or strokes every year.
About 80 per cent of cardiovascular events occur in individuals without a prior history of such illness, meaning effective preventative strategies including medications in people without CVD is essential, if the majority of heart attacks, strokes and related deaths in the world are to be prevented, the authors of the study state.
"This combination, either given separately or combined as a polypill, substantially reduces fatal and non-fatal CVD events," said lead author Philip Joseph, associate professor of medicine at McMaster University, investigator at the Population Health Research Institute and cardiologist at Hamilton Health Sciences.
"The largest effects are seen with treatments that include blood pressure-lowering agents, a statin and aspirin together, which can reduce fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events by about half.
"The benefits are consistent at different blood pressure levels, cholesterol levels and with or without diabetes, but larger benefits may occur in older people."
Joseph is the first author of the meta-analysis study by the Population Health Research Institute (PHRI) of McMaster University and Hamilton Health Sciences. Salim Yusuf, executive director of the PHRI and Distinguished University Professor at McMaster, is the senior author and the Principal Investigator.
The study involved investigators from 13 countries and included participants from 26 countries and every inhabited continent of the world.
FDC treatment strategies trialed by the researchers were previously thought to substantially reduce CVD events and are called 'polypills' when used in a single-tablet drug formula, but proof of the benefits has not been available until the last two years.
The concept of a combination pill was first proposed exactly 20 years ago as a strategy to substantially reduce CVD in the population and also in those who already have had a previous heart attack or stroke.
Early trials demonstrated improved patient adherence to treatment regimens and better risk factor control with a polypill, compared to the use of single drugs, usual care, or placebos.
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