Role of the polypill for secondary prevention in ischaemic heart disease

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • José M Castellano
  • Valentín Fuster
  • Catriona Jennings
  • Prescott, Eva
  • Héctor Bueno

In 2011, for the first time in the history of humankind, non-communicable diseases became the leading cause of death worldwide. This change in trend is obviously multifactorial and very complex, as it is the paradoxical result of social, economic and health system growth worldwide. Vaccination and infectious diseases control, changing dietary habits worldwide, sedentary behaviour, globalisation, industrialisation (resulting in a shift from manual to sedentary labour), tobacco and sugary beverage surges in low- and middle-income countries and rapid urbanisation have all played a role in this epidemic transition. At the same time, the increase in cardiovascular risk factors, together with a decline in mortality in high-income countries in the past two decades, has led to a significant upsurge in the prevalence of secondary prevention of ischaemic heart disease. With this, the effect that non-adherence to cardioprotective drugs is having has become progressively clear, both in terms of clinical outcomes and as a driver of increased healthcare expenditure. The cardiovascular polypill, which was originally proposed as a strategy to improve accessibility to cardioprotective drugs worldwide, has proven to be a mainstay therapeutic approach for improving medication adherence in cardiovascular disease. In the current paper, we aim to review the need for a polypill strategy in the present scenario of cardiovascular disease, the available data that support such a strategy and the various clinical trials that are in progress that will help further shape future indications for the cardiovascular polypill.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean Journal of Preventive Cardiology
Volume24
Issue number3_suppl
Pages (from-to)44-51
Number of pages8
ISSN2047-4873
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2017

    Research areas

  • Administration, Oral, Cardiovascular Agents/administration & dosage, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Disease Progression, Drug Combinations, Drug Costs, Humans, Medication Adherence, Myocardial Ischemia/drug therapy, Recurrence, Risk Factors, Secondary Prevention/economics, Tablets, Treatment Outcome

ID: 196132350