Abstract
BackgroundCardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality is substantially higher in Russia than in neighbouring Norway. We aimed to compare blood pressure- and lipid-lowering medication use and proportion meeting treatment targets between general population samples in the two countries in those with CVD and diabetes.MethodsThe study population was adults aged 40–69 years reporting a diagnosis of myocardial infarction (MI), stroke and/or diabetes participating in cross-sectional population-based studies in Russia (Know Your Heart (KYH) 2015–18 N = 626) and Norway (The Tromsø Study 2015–16 (Tromsø 7) N = 1353). Reported medications were coded according to the 2016 WHO Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification system. Treatment targets were defined using the Joint European Societies guidelines for CVD prevention in clinical practice (2016).ResultsAge- and sex-standardized prevalence of use of lipid-lowering medications was higher in Tromsø 7 for all three conditions with a disproportionately large difference in those reporting MI (+ 48% (95% CI 39, 57%)). Proportion meeting treatment targets for LDL cholesterol was poor in both studies (age- and sex-standardized prevalence of control KYH vs Tromsø 7: MI 5.1% vs 10.1%; stroke 11.6% vs 5.8%; diabetes 24.9% vs 23.3%). Use of antihypertensive medication was higher in KYH for stroke (+ 40% (95% CI 30, 50%)) and diabetes (+ 27% (95% CI 19, 34%)) groups but approximately equal for the MI group (− 1% (95% CI -1, 1%)). Proportion meeting blood pressure targets was lower in KYH vs Tromsø 7 (MI 51.8% vs 76.3%; stroke 49.5% vs 69.6%; diabetes 51.9% vs 63.9%).ConclusionsWe identified different patterns of medication use in people with CVD and diabetes. However despite higher use of lipid-lowering medication in the Norwegian study treatment to target for total cholesterol was poor in both Russian and Norwegian studies. In contrast we found higher levels of use of antihypertensive medications in the Russian study but also that less participants met treatment targets for blood pressure. Further work should investigate what factors are responsible for this seeming paradox and how management of modifiable risk factors for secondary prevention could be improved.
Highlights
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality is substantially higher in Russia than in neighbouring Norway
Proportion meeting treatment targets for LDL cholesterol was poor in both studies
Use of antihypertensive medication was higher in Know Your Heart Study [10] (KYH) for stroke (+ 40%) and diabetes (+ 27%) groups but approximately equal for the myocardial infarction (MI) group (− 1%)
Summary
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality is substantially higher in Russia than in neighbouring Norway. Management of modifiable risk factors such as high blood pressure and lipid levels following CVD diagnosis is crucial for long term prognosis [4, 5] This includes both lifestyle changes and pharmacological management with appropriate antihypertensive and lipid-lowering medications, and management of co-existing diabetes according to regularly updated European treatment guidelines [5]. EUROASPIRE IV [4] (2012–13) collected data from clinical centres in 24 European countries including Russia on management of CVD risk factors following hospitalisation with coronary heart disease. It showed that, antihypertensive and lipid-lowering medications were widely used, control of these risk factors, lipids, was sub-optimal across Europe. A multi-centre population survey found that the use of lipid-lowering medication was substantially lower than found in EUROASPIRE IV [9]
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