A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Patient-Associated Characteristics Influencing the Risk for Non-Persistence with Statins in Older Patients with Peripheral Arterial Disease




AuthorsMartin Wawruch, Gejza WimmerJr, Jan Murin, Martina Paduchova, Tomas Tesar, Lubica Hlinkova, Peter Slavkovsky, Lubomira Fabryova, Emma Aarnio

PublisherSpringer International Publishing

Publication year2019

Journal:Drugs and Aging

Journal name in sourceDrugs and Aging

Volume36

Issue9

First page 863

Last page873

Number of pages11

ISSN1170-229X

eISSN1179-1969

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s40266-019-00689-2


Abstract

Background and Objectives: Secondary prevention of peripheral arterial disease includes administration of statins regardless of the patient’s serum cholesterol level. Our study aimed to identify patient-associated risk factors for statin non-persistence and comparison of the explanatory power of models based on clusters of patient-associated characteristics.

Methods: Our study cohort (n = 8330) was assembled from the database of the largest health insurance provider in the Slovak Republic. Statin users aged ≥ 65 years in whom peripheral arterial disease was diagnosed during 2012 were included. Patients were followed for 5 years; those with a treatment gap period of at least 6 months without statin prescription were classified as “non-persistent”. The risk factors for non-persistence were identified within six models (sociodemographic, cardiovascular events, comorbid conditions, statin-related characteristics, cardiovascular co-medication and full model) using Cox regression. The explanatory power of models was assessed using Harrell’s C-index.

Results: At the end of the follow-up, 35.7% of patients were found to be non-persistent. The full model had the highest explanatory power (C = 0.632). Female sex, atorvastatin and rosuvastatin as initially administered statins, being a new statin user and an increasing co-payment were associated with an increased risk for non-persistence. Increasing age, history of ischaemic stroke, diabetes mellitus, general practitioner as index prescriber, increasing overall number of medications and co-administration of certain cardiovascular co-medications were associated with a lower likelihood for non-persistence.

Conclusions: Patients identified as high risk for non-persistence require special attention aimed at the improvement of their persistence with statin treatment.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 21:46