Title: Cardiovascular risk assessment
1Cardiovascular risk assessment
You can only predict things after they have
happened
Eugéne Ionesco 1912-1994
2Aims
- We will consider
- What is risk?
- How does risk relate to the management of
cardiovascular disease (CVD)? - How can we communicate risk to patients?
3What is risk?http//riskcomm.com
- Risk is the likelihood of being harmed in some
way - How we define and understand risk depends on
- emotional factors rather than hard facts
- our instinctive bias
- whether we understand the difference between
risks and hazards - Harm is not often due to a single cause so it
becomes harder to define what a risk is - When we try to avoid a risk, we can change some
part of the situation that potentially results in
exposure to a different risk
4Communicating riskto patients
http//www.cks.library.nhs.uk
- It is difficult to communicate risk and
uncertainty - When discussing cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk
with people, show them the risk prediction charts
(and calculator) to help them understand their
estimated risk of experiencing a cardiovascular
event within the next 10 years - It is usually more helpful to discuss total CVD
risk rather than individual risks for CHD, stroke
or other events - Individuals may have differing thresholds of risk
before considering drug treatment to lower risk
and this may be associated with social class
5Communicating risk to patientsBritish Heart
Foundation www.bhf.org.uk
- If people want to know the benefits and risks of
investigations and treatments then we have to be
able to communicate them effectively - The way in which health professionals communicate
risk affects patients perception of that risk - Patients should be provided with a balanced and
fair assessment of the pros and cons of the
various options, based on well-founded data - Use of simple visual aids and everyday analogies
can help to increase understanding and ensure
that consent is properly informed
6Strategies to help patients understand risks
Paling J. BMJ 20033277458
- Avoid purely descriptive terms of risk e.g. low
risk - Use probabilities, not percentages
- Use a consistent denominator, e.g. 1 in 100, 5 in
100, not 1 in 100, 1 in 20 - Use absolute numbers (not relative)
- Use visual aids e.g. smiley faces available
from www.nntonline.net
- How you say something matters
- e.g. if someone has a 10 10-year risk of CVD you
could say - you have a 10 chance of having a heart attack
or stroke in the next 10 years - you have a 90 chance of not having a heart
attack or stroke in the next 10 years
7How to calculate CVD riskhttp//www.cks.library.n
hs.uk/
- The Joint British Societies (JBS) 2 charts (and
calculator) are preferred over other risk
assessment tools - Use a consistent approach to the assessment and
management of total CVD risk - Cardiovascular disease risk should be managed in
the same way in people with established disease
and in people who are asymptomatic but at high
total risk for CVD
- DH. National Service Framework for Coronary Heart
Disease - The NSF for CHD recommends that we should
identify all people at significant risk of
cardiovascular disease, but who have not yet
developed symptoms, and offer them appropriate
advice and treatment to reduce their risk
8Joint British Societies (JBS) 2 charts
http//www.cks.library.nhs.uk/
- People are considered to be at high risk for
cardiovascular disease events if they have - a 10-year risk for CVD events greater than 20
because of multiple risk factors or a condition
that is known to pose a high risk for CVD events,
e.g. established coronary heart disease, stroke
or transient ischaemic attack, type 1 or 2
diabetes - People who have a single risk factor that is
particularly abnormal are also considered to be
at high risk - e.g. people with blood pressure 160/100 mmHg,
or familial dyslipidaemia - People with 10-year CVD risk of 1020 (orange on
the JBS 2 risk charts) are considered to be at
moderate risk - People with 10-year CVD risk less than 10 (green
on the JBS 2 charts) are considered to be at low
risk
9Summary
- Know how to use the updated Joint British tables
(or another NSF-approved risk tool) to calculate
a patients risk - A patient is at high risk if their 10-year CVD
risk exceeds 20 - Appreciate the limitations of the calculators and
that prediction is an imprecise science - Be aware of how you communicate risk issues to
patients - Communication can be helped by using visual aids