Abstract

Background: The impact of statin therapy on cardiovascular outcomes after ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction (STEMI) in real-world patients is understudied. Objectives: to identify predictors of low adherence and discontinuation to statin therapy within 6 months after STEMI and to estimate their impact on cardiovascular outcomes at one year follow-up. Methods: We evaluated real-world adherence to statin therapy by comparing the number of bought tablets to the expected ones at 1 year follow-up through pharmacy registries. A total of 6043 STEMI patients admitted from 2012 to 2017 were enrolled in the FAST STEMI registry and followed up for 4,7±1,6 years; 299 patients with intraprocedural and intrahospital deaths were excluded. The main outcomes evaluated were all-cause death, cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, major and minor bleeding events, and ischemic stroke. The compliance cut-off chosen was 80% as mainly reported in literature. Results: From a total of 5744 patients, 418 (7,2%) patients interrupted statin therapy within 6 months after STEMI. After univariate and multivariate analysis age over 75 years old, known ischemic cardiopathy and female gender resulted as predictors of therapy discontinuation. Statin discontinuation within 6 months showed an increase of both cardiovascular (5% vs 1.7%; HR 2.23; 95%CI 1.37-3.65; p=0,001) and all-cause mortality (14.8% vs 5.1%, HR 2.32; 95%CI 1.73-3.11; p<0,001) at 1 year follow-up. Regarding cardiovascular outcomes, statin optimal adherence (>80%) reduced ischemic stroke incidence (1% vs 2.5%, p=0.001) and both cardiovascular and all-cause death (0.1% vs 4.6%; 0.3% vs 13.4%; p<0.001) at 1 year follow-up. Age over 75 years old, chronic renal failure, previous atrial fibrillation, vasculopathy, known ischemic cardiopathy were found to be predictors of low statin adherence. Conclusions: In our real-world registry low statin adherence and discontinuation therapy within 6 months after STEMI were independently associated to an increase of cardiovascular and all-cause mortality at 1 year follow-up. Low statin adherence led to higher rates of ischemic stroke. This analysis confirmed the predictive factors of adherence and discontinuation therapy already described in literature.

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