Abstract
Objective: To describe patterns of statin use and predictors of poor maintenance over a 3-year period following an acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Methods: National hospitalisation, mortality and pharmaceutical dispensing data were linked for all subjects aged 35-84 years discharged from a public hospital with an ACS in New Zealand in 2007.A Medication Possession Ratio (MPR; percentage of follow-up days patients were dispensed statins) was calculated for each patient. Adequate maintenance was defined by a MPR ≥80%. Results: In 2007, 11 348 patients aged 35-84 years were discharged from hospital with ACS. Within 90 days of discharge, 83% had received a statin. Over the follow-up period, 66% were adequately maintained on a statin (MPR ≥80%): 69% in the first year, 67% in the second year and 66% in the third year. Patients taking statins prior to admission and those who underwent a coronary procedure were 20-50% more likely to have a MPR ≥80% over 3 years than others. In contrast, people aged 35-45 years and those of Maori or Pacific ethnicity were 13-25% less likely to have a MPR ≥80% than those aged 55-64 years and Europeans.Conclusions: One-third of patients were not adequately maintained on statins over the 3-year period following ACS, but 82% of those on a statin prior to admission had an MPR ≥80% over 3 years of follow-up. These findings define achievable treatment levels and identify groups who may benefit from efforts to improve statin use.
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CITATION STYLE
Grey, C., Jackson, R., Wells, S., Thornley, S., Marshall, R., Crengle, S., … Kerr, A. (2014). Maintenance of statin use over 3 years following acute coronary syndromes: A national data linkage study (ANZACS-QI-2). Heart, 100(10), 770–774. https://doi.org/10.1136/heartjnl-2013-304960
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