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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE National Trends in the Prescribing of Anti-Hypertensive Medications Jun Ma, MD, PhD Research Associate Mentor: Randall Stafford, MD, PhD Program on Prevention Outcomes and Practices
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Background Practice guidelines aim to guide physician practice according to the best available evidence Process of translating national guidelines and clinical evidence into public health benefit is complex Past studies suggest that guidelines are not necessarily being followed
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Background Diffusion of information from latest guidelines and clinical trial findings is suboptimal Despite the promise of new findings, adoption patterns may not always serve patients: Use of medications lacking evidence of benefit Failure to use drugs with the strongest evidence Suggestion that sizable increase in drug costs has not provided a public health benefit
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Antihypertensive Prescribing : Magnitude of the Problem Elevated blood pressure is a major risk factor for heart diseases and stroke – leading causes of death in the U.S. About 50 million Americans have elevated blood pressure with continued increases expected Antihypertensive medications cost $15 billion annually (10% of drug costs)
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Objective Examine the impact of JNC guidelines on antihypertensive prescribing by physicians in private practice and hospital outpatient clinics
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Guidelines for HTN Treatment Joint National Commission (JNC) on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood Pressure JNC V recommendations (1993) Diuretics and β-blockers should be used as preferred first-line medications JNC VI recommendations (1997) Diuretics and/or β-blockers should be used as first-line agents unless specific comorbidities compel selection of other drugs
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Data Sources U.S. ambulatory care surveys 1993-2002 by National Center for Health Statistics National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) Nationally representative sample of patient visits to office-based physicians National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS) Nationally representative sample of patient visits to hospital outpatient departments (OPDs)
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Data Sources Multistage probability sampling procedures NAMCS: PSU Physicians Patient Visits NHAMCS: PSU Hospitals OPDs Visits Annual participation rates NAMCS: 63-73% of selected physicians NHAMCS: 94-98% of selected hospitals Physician/staff-recorded information on standard patient encounter forms
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Study Sample Hypertensive visits: patient visits having a principal diagnosis of essential HTN Sample size: 645-1059 (namcs)/ 809-1110 (nhamcs) National estimates: 23-49M/18-37M Antihypertensive drug visits: hypertensive visits in which at least 1 antihypertensive drug was mentioned % of hypertensive visits: 65-80%
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Antihypertensive Medication Classes Diuretics: thiazides vs. other diuretics Beta/Alpha-Beta Blockers Calcium Antagonists ACE Inhibitors Angiotensin Receptor Blockers (ARBs) Alpha Blockers Central-Acting Alpha-Agonists Direct Vasodilators
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Trends in Antihypertensive Prescribing, NAMCS JNC VJNC VI
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Trends in Antihypertensive Prescribing, NHAMCS JNC VJNC VI
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Trends in Prescribing of Diuretics, NAMCS JNC VJNC VI
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Trends in Prescribing of Diuretics, NHAMCS JNC VJNC VI
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Differences in Prescribing of Diuretics, NAMCS and NHAMCS Diuretics Sex (ref: Female) Male0.65 (0.55 0.77) Race (ref: White) African American1.53 (1.23 1.91) Age (ref: 20-44 y) 45-59 60-74 75+ 1.42 (1.05 1.91) 1.47 (1.12 1.93) 1.73 (1.23 2.43) Time (ref: ‘93-’97) ’98-’021.07 (0.89 1.29)
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Differences in Prescribing of - Blockers, NAMCS and NHAMCS -Blocker Sex (ref: Female) Male0.89 (0.74 1.07) Race (ref: White) African American0.74 (0.57 0.95) Age (ref: 20-44 y) 45-59 60-74 75+ 1.01 (0.74 1.39) 0.88 (0.64 1.20) 0.86 (0.57 1.30) Time (ref: ‘93-’97) ’98-’021.24 (1.01 1.51)
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Guidelines for HTN Treatment Joint National Commission (JNC) on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood Pressure JNC VII recommendations (2003) Thiazide diuretics should be initial choice either alone or in combination with drugs of other classes ALLHAT (Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack Trial) ( Dec 2002 ) Thiazide diuretics are at least as effective as the more expensive ACE inhibitors and CCBs in lowering blood pressure as well as cardiovascular events
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE IMS Health Data National Disease and Therapeutic Index Nationally-based random sample of patient visits to office-based physicians Physician-reported data on new and continuing medications for each diagnosis per patient visit Annual sample size for HTN averaged 20,000
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Most Recent Trends in Antihypertensive Prescribing ALLHATJNC VII
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Summary of Results Changes in antihypertensive prescribing are generally consistent with JNC recommendations and clinical evidence Increased prescribing of thiazide diuretics Increased prescribing of -blockers Declined prescribing of CCBs and more recently of ACE inhibitors
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Summary of Results Thiazides remain under prescribed despite most favorable cost-effectiveness Immediate upswing in thiazides following the ALLHAT publication in December 2002 did not sustain Impact of clinical evidence alone can be short-lived Efforts needed to encourage widespread adoption of evidence-based medicine
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Summary of Results CCBs and ACE inhibitors remain the most frequently prescribed antihypertensive drug classes Increasing popularity of ARBs More recent market entry and associated intense advertising
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Limitations Visit-based data may not reflect proportions of use in general population Lack of data necessary to assess treatment appropriateness at individual level Lack of data on patient compliance and outcomes
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Implications Need to foster more timely and complete dissemination of evidence-based guidelines Need to address physician adherence barriers Lack of awareness or familiarity with guidelines Lack of agreement with recommendations Attractiveness of new therapies and pressure to use the latest therapy
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Implications Need to shift focus from reducing blood pressure (single risk factor) to prevention of CVD (absolute risk) Need to assess the impact of evidence in the context of other factors that can influence prescribing practices
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Stanford Prevention Research Center STANFORD SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
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