Conference Coverage
VIDEO: Rivaroxaban plus aspirin cut cardiovascular events in stable patients
BARCELONA – The COMPASS trial produced “unambiguous results that should change guidelines and the management of stable coronary artery disease,”...
On the third day of the American Heart Association scientific sessions, antithrombotic therapy is the focus of the Late-Breaking Science 5 presentation, at 10:45 a.m.-12 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 14, followed by innovative investigations in evaluating quality improvement and patient-centered care interventions in the Late-Breaking Science 6 session, to be held at 3:45-5:15 p.m. Here are some highlights.
The session begins with a cost analysis of the COMPASS (Rivaroxaban for the Prevention of Major Cardiovascular Events in Coronary or Peripheral Artery Disease) trial, which randomized more than 27,000 patients with stable coronary artery disease to antithrombotic treatment with either rivaroxaban plus aspirin or aspirin alone. The main results, presented in August, showed that the dual regimen reduced the combined rate of cardiovascular disease events by 24%, compared with aspirin alone. Andre Lamy, MD, of the Population Health Research Institute, Hamilton, Ont., will present the cost analysis:
The seven presentations in this session range from findings from the enormous SWEDEHEART registry on how treatments have improved for ST-elevation MI over 20 years, to STIC2IT, a cluster randomized, controlled trial to test whether a novel telepharmacist-based intervention for patients with metabolic syndrome improves medication adherence and disease control.
Other presentations include evaluation of a quality improvement toolkit on AMI in India called ACS QUIK; a trial of a decision support intervention for patients and caregivers offered a heart assist device as destination therapy called DECIDE-LVAD; a national rollout of a clinical guidance framework for the assessment of patients with possible ACS in emergency departments (iCARE-ACS); and a report from the American College of Cardiology’s Mission: Lifeline STEMI ACCELERATOR-2 study.
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BARCELONA – The COMPASS trial produced “unambiguous results that should change guidelines and the management of stable coronary artery disease,”...