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In-hospital statin initiation characteristics and one-year statin adherence rates in patients hospitalised for acute coronary syndrome

  • Barış Şimşek
  • , Tufan Çınar
  • , Veysel Ozan Tanık
  • , Duygu İnan
  • , İlhan İlker Avcı
  • , Gönül Zeren
  • , Ahmet Ilker Tekkeşin
  • , Can Yucel Karabay
  • , Baris Gungor
  • , Lale Tokgozoglu
  • University of Health Sciences
  • Ministry of Health, Turkey

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Introduction: In the present study, we aimed to evaluate compliance to lipid lowering guidelines regarding statin prescription on discharge and statin adherence rates during a follow-up period of one year in patients hospitalised with a diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Methods: In-hospital records of 3506 ACS patients, of which 771 had experienced an ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and 2735 had experienced a non-STEMI, were collected. We calculated medication possession ratios (MPRs) for each subject. We designated patients with ≥9 statin refills/year (MPR ≥ 0.75) as the statin-adherent group and patients with <9 statin refills/year (MPR < 0.75) as the statin-non-adherent group. Results: During a 12-month follow-up period, 234 patients in the STEMI group (30.3%) and 391 patients in the non-STEMI group (14.3%) had 12 refills of statin. Thus, only 17.8% of the total study population had complete adherence to statin therapy with an MPR of 1. When patients with ≥9 statin prescriptions were categorised as the statin-adherent group, only 1575 patients (44.9%) were found to be adherent to statin treatment. In multivariate analysis, patients with a non-STEMI diagnosis and high intensity statin treatment had higher rates of non-adherence (OR:1.685, 95%CI:1.412–2.012, p <.01 and OR:1.344, 95% CI: 1.147–1.574, p <.01, respectively). Patients with prior statin treatment had lower rates of non-adherence(OR:0.437, 95%CI: 0.346–0.553, p <.01). Conclusion: The present study shows that compliance with guidelines regarding statin initiation during hospitalisation and statin adherence rates during a one-year follow-up period are low for patients treated for ACS. Considering the overwhelming clinical benefits of high-intensity statins in patients with ACS, every effort should be made to increase the rate of optimal use of statins in secondary prevention.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-7
Number of pages7
JournalActa Cardiologica
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

Keywords

  • Statin adherence; in-hospital; long-term; acute coronary syndrome; non-adherence
  • lipid

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