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Cardiovascular Disease in Women Module VII: Evidence-Based Guidelines

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Title: The Heart Truth Educational Slide Module: Evidence based guidelines Author: HHS/OW/OPHS/OWH Last modified by: CIT Created Date: 9/11/2002 8:49:52 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cardiovascular Disease in Women Module VII: Evidence-Based Guidelines


1
Cardiovascular Disease in Women Module VII
Evidence-Based Guidelines
2
Evidence-based Guidelines for Cardiovascular
Disease Prevention in Women 2007 Update
  • Mosca L, et al. Circulation 2007 1151481-501.
  • http//www.circ.ahajournals.org

3
Evidence Based Guidelines for CVD Prevention in
Women
  • Classification of Recommendations
  • Class I Intervention is useful and effective
  • Class II a Weight of evidence/opinion is in
    favor of usefulness/efficacy
  • Class II b Usefulness/efficacy is less well
    established by evidence/opinion
  • Class III Intervention is not useful/effective
    and may be harmful

Source Mosca 2007
4
Level of Evidence
  • A. Sufficient evidence from multiple randomized
    trials
  • B. Limited evidence from single randomized
    trial or other non randomized trials
  • C. Based on expert opinion, case studies of
    standard of care
  • Generalizability index 1 very likely
  • 2 somewhat likely
  • 3 unlikely
  • 0 unable to project

Source Mosca 2004
5
Clinical Recommendations
  • Lifestyle Interventions
  • Major Risk Factor Interventions
  • Preventive Drug Interventions
  • Interventions that are not useful/effective and
    may be harmful

Source Mosca 2007
6
Cardiovascular Disease Prevention in Women
Current Guidelines
  • A five-step approach
  • Assess and stratify women into high risk,
    at risk, and optimal risk categories
  • Lifestyle approaches recommended for all women
  • Other cardiovascular disease interventions
    treatment of HTN, DM, lipid abnormalities
  • Highest priority is for interventions in high
    risk patients
  • Avoid initiating therapies that have been shown
    to lack benefit, or where risks outweigh
    benefits

Sources Adapted from Mosca 2004, Mosca 2007
7
Risk Stratification
  • High Risk
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Documented atherosclerotic disease
  • Established coronary heart disease
  • Peripheral arterial disease
  • Cerebrovascular disease
  • Abdominal aortic aneurysm
  • Includes many patients with chronic kidney
    disease, especially ESRD
  • 10-year Framingham global risk gt 20, or high
    risk based on another population-adapted global
    risk assessment tool

Source Mosca 2007
8
Risk Stratification
  • At Risk
  • gt 1 major risk factors for CVD, including
  • Cigarette smoking
  • Hypertension
  • Dyslipidemia
  • Family history of premature CVD (CVD at lt 55
    years in a male relative, or lt 65 years in a
    female relative)
  • Obesity, especially central obesity
  • Physical inactivity
  • Poor diet
  • Metabolic syndrome
  • Evidence of subclinical coronary artery disease
    (eg coronary calcification), or poor exercise
    capacity on treadmill test or abnormal heart
    rate recovery after stopping exercise

Source Mosca 2007
9
Risk Stratification
  • Optimal risk
  • No risk factors
  • Healthy lifestyle
  • Framingham global risk lt 10

Source Mosca 2007
10
Risk Stratification
  • Calculate 10 year risk for all patients with two
    or more risk factors that do not already meet
    criteria for CHD equivalent
  • Use electronic calculator for most precise
    estimate http//www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/cho
    lesterol/index.htm

Source Mosca 2004
11
Lifestyle Interventions
  • Smoking cessation
  • Physical activity
  • Heart healthy diet
  • Weight reduction/maintenance

Source Mosca 2007
12
Lifestyle Interventions
  • Smoking cessation
  • Physical activity
  • Heart healthy diet
  • Weight reduction/maintenance
  • Cardiac rehabilitation
  • Omega-3 fatty acids
  • Depression

Source Mosca 2007
13
Smoking
  • All women should be consistently encouraged to
    stop smoking and avoid environmental tobacco
  • The same treatments benefit both women and men
  • Women face different barriers to quitting
  • Concomitant depression
  • Concerns about weight gain
  • Provide counseling, nicotine replacement, and
    other pharmacotherapy as indicated in conjunction
    with a behavioral program or other formal
    smoking cessation program

Source Fiore 2000, Mosca 2007
14
Physical Activity
  • Consistently encourage women to accumulate a
    minimum of 30 minutes of moderate intensity
    physical activity on most, or preferably all,
    days of the week
  • Women who need to lose weight or sustain weight
    loss should accumulate a minimum of 60-90 minutes
    of moderate-intensity physical activity on most,
    and preferably all, days of the week

Source Mosca 2007
15
Diet
  • Consistently encourage healthy eating patterns
  • Healthy food selections
  • Fruits and vegetables
  • Whole grains, high fiber
  • Fish, especially oily fish, at least twice per
    week
  • No more than one drink of alcohol per day
  • Less than 2.3 grams of sodium per day
  • Saturated fats lt 10 of calories, lt 300mg
    cholesterol per day
  • Limit trans fatty acid intake (main dietary
    sources are baked goods and fried foods made
    with partially hydrogenated vegetable oil)

Source Mosca 2007
16
Weight Maintenance/Reduction Goals
  • Women should maintain or lose weight through an
    appropriate balance of physical activity, calorie
    intake, and formal behavioral programs when
    indicated to maintain
  • BMI between 18.5 and 24.9 kg/m²
  • Waist circumference lt 35 inches

Source Mosca 2007
17
Depression
  • Consider screening women with coronary heart
    disease for depression and refer/treat when
    indicated

Source Mosca 2007
18
Omega-3 Fatty Acids
  • As an adjunct to diet, omega-3 fatty acid
    supplements in capsule form (approximately
    850-1000 mg of EPA and DHA) may be considered in
    women with CHD
  • Higher doses (2 to 4 g) may be used for treatment
    of women with high triglyceride levels

Source Mosca 2007
19
Cardiac Rehabilitation
  • A comprehensive risk reduction regimen should be
    recommended to women with recent acute coronary
    syndrome or coronary intervention, new-onset or
    chronic angina, recent cerebrovascular event,
    peripheral arterial disease, or current/prior
    symptoms of heart failure and an LVEF lt 40
  • Risk reduction regimens may include
  • Cardiac or stroke rehabilitation
  • Physician-guided home- or community-based
    exercise training programs

Source Mosca 2007
20
Major Risk Factor Interventions
  • Blood Pressure
  • Lipids
  • Diabetes

Source Mosca 2007
21
Major Risk Factor Interventions
  • Blood Pressure
  • Target BPlt120/80 mmHg
  • Pharmacotherapy if BPgt 140/90, or gt 130/80 in
    diabetics or patients with renal disease
  • Lipids
  • Follow NCEP/ATP III guidelines
  • Diabetes
  • Target HbA1Clt7, if this can be accomplished
    without significant hypoglycemia

Source Mosca 2007
22
Hypertension
  • Encourage an optimal blood pressure of lt 120/80
    mm Hg through lifestyle approaches
  • Pharmacologic therapy is indicated when blood
    pressure is gt 140/90 mm Hg or an even lower
    blood pressure in the setting of diabetes or
    target-organ damage (gt 130/80 mm Hg)
  • Thiazide diuretics should be part of the drug
    regimenfor most patients unless contraindicated,
    or unless compelling indications exist for other
    agents
  • For high risk women, initial treatment should be
    with a beta-blocker or angiotensin converting
    enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker

Source Mosca 2007
23
Lipids
  • Optimal levels of lipids and lipoproteins in
    women are as follows (these should be encouraged
    in all women with lifestyle approaches)
  • LDL lt 100mg/dL
  • HDL gt 50m/dL
  • Triglycerides lt 150mg/d
  • Non-HDL (total cholesterol minus HDL) lt 130mg/d

Source Mosca 2007
24
Lipids
  • Optimal levels of lipids and lipoproteins in
    women are as follows (these should be encouraged
    in all women with lifestyle approaches)
  • LDL lt 100mg/dL
  • HDL gt 50m/dL
  • Triglycerides lt 150mg/d
  • Non-HDL (total cholesterol minus HDL) lt 130mg/d

Source Mosca 2007
25
Lipids
  • In high-risk women or when LDL is elevated
  • Saturated fat lt 7 of calories
  • Cholesterol lt 200mg/day
  • Reduce trans-fatty acids
  • Major dietary sources are foods baked and fried
    with partially hydrogenated vegetable oil

Source Mosca 2007
26
2004 Update of ATP III
  • 5 recent clinical trials suggest added benefit of
    optional lowering of cholesterol more than ATP
    III recommended
  • Lifestyle changes remain cornerstone of treatment
  • Advises that intensity of LDL-lowering drug
    treatment in high-risk and moderately high-risk
    patients achieve at least 30 reduction in LDL
    levels

Source Grundy 2004
27
Lipids
  • Treat high risk women aggressively with
    pharmacotherapy
  • LDL-lowering pharmacotherapy (preferably a
    statin) should be initiated simultaneously with
    lifestyle modification for women with LDLgt100mg/dl

Source Mosca 2007
28
Very High Risk Women
  • Recent heart attack or known CAD, along with one
    or more of the following
  • Multiple major risk factors, particularly in
    diabetics
  • Severe or poorly controlled risk factors (i.e.,
    continued smoking)
  • Multiple risk factors of the metabolic syndrome,
    especially TG gt 200 mg/dL AND HDL lt 40 mg/dL
  • LDL goal of lt 100mg/dL
  • Consider statin, even if LDL lt 100mg/dL
  • Optional LDL goal of lt 70mg/dL per ATP III 2004
    update

Source Grundy 2004
29
High Risk Women
  • gt 20 10-year risk of CHD
  • CHD, large vessel atherosclerotic disease, DM
  • Goal LDL lt 100mg/dL, consider statin even if
    LDLlt 100 mg/dL

Source Grundy 2004
30
At-Risk Women Multiple or Severe Risk Factors,
10-20 10-Year CHD Risk
  • Initiate drug therapy if LDL gt 130 mg/dL after
    lifestyle therapy
  • Goal LDL lt 100 mg/dL, consider drug therapy if
    LDL 100 mg/dL

Source Grundy 2004, Mosca 2007
31
At-Risk Women Multiple Risk Factors, 10-Year
CHD Risk lt 10
  • Initiate drug therapy if LDL gt 160 mg/dL after
    lifestyle therapy

Source Grundy 2004, Mosca 2007
32
At-Risk Women No Other Risk Factors, 10-Year
CHD Risk lt 10
  • Initiate drug therapy if LDL gt 190 mg/dL after
    lifestyle therapy
  • Drug therapy optional for LDL 160-189 mg/dL
    after lifestyle therapy

Source Grundy 2004, Mosca 2007
33
Lipids
  • High risk women
  • Initiate niacin or fibrate therapy when HDL is
    low, or non-HDL is elevated after LDL goal is
    reached
  • Other at-risk women
  • Consider niacin or fibrate therapy when HDL is
    low, or non-HDL is elevated after LDL goal is
    reached in women with multiple risk factors and
    a 10-year CHD risk of 10-20

Source Mosca 2007
34
Diabetes
  • Recommendation Lifestyle and pharmacotherapy
    should be used as indicated in women with
    diabetes to achieve a HbA1C lt 7, if this can be
    accomplished without significant hypoglycemia

Source Mosca 2007
35
Preventive Drug Interventions for Women with CHD
  • Aspirin
  • Beta-blockers
  • Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors
  • Angiotensin receptor blockers
  • Aldosterone blockade

Source Mosca 2007
36
Preventive Drug Interventions
  • Aspirin High risk women
  • 75-325 mg/day, or clopidogrel if patient
    intolerant to aspirin, should be used in
    high-risk women unless contraindicated
  • Aspirin- Other at-risk or healthy women
  • Consider aspirin therapy (81 mg/day or 100 mg
    every other day) if blood pressure is controlled
    and benefit is likely to outweigh risk of GI side
    effects and hemorrhagic stroke
  • Benefits include ischemic stroke and MI
    prevention in women aged gt 65 years, and ischemic
    stroke prevention in women lt 65 years

Source Mosca 2007
37
Preventive Drug Interventions
  • Beta-Blockers
  • Should be used indefinitely in all women after
    MI, acute coronary syndrome, or left ventricular
    dysfunction with or without heart failure
    symptoms, unless contraindicated

Source Mosca 2007
38
Preventive Drug Interventions
  • Aldosterone blockade
  • Should be used after MI in women who do not have
    significant renal dysfunction or hyperkalemia who
    are already receiving therapeutic doses of an
    angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor and
    beta-blocker, and have an LVEF lt 40 with
    symptomatic heart failure

Source Mosca 2007
39
Preventive Drug Interventions
  • Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme InhibitorsShould
    be used (unless contraindicated) after MI, and in
    those women with clinical evidence of heart
    failure or an LVEF lt 40 or diabetes mellitus
  • Angiotensin-receptor blockers
  • Should be used in women who cannot tolerate
    angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors after
    MI, and in those women with clinical evidence of
    heart failure or an LVEF lt 40 or diabetes
    mellitus, unless contraindicated

Source Mosca 2007
40
Interventions that are not useful/effective and
may be harmful for the prevention of heart
disease
  • Hormone therapy and selective estrogen-receptor
    modulators (SERMs) should not be used for the
    primary or secondary prevention of CVD

Source Mosca 2007
41
Interventions that are not useful/effective and
may be harmful for the prevention of heart
disease
  • Antioxidant vitamin supplements (eg, vitamin E,
    C, and beta carotene) should not be used for the
    primary or secondary prevention of CVD
  • Folic acid, with or without B6 and B12
    supplementation, should not be used for the
    primary or secondary prevention of CVD

Source Mosca 2007
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