Abstract

Preventive drugs are often underused. Carotid intima-media thickness and carotid plaques are associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD), and their detection could possibly improve estimation of the likelihood of CVD and prescription of preventive drugs. To evaluate whether pictorial information on participants' asymptomatic atherosclerosis based on carotid ultrasonographic examinations to participants and their physicians had an effect on prescribing of lipid-lowering or antihypertensive drugs during the following 465 days. Visualization of Asymptomatic Atherosclerotic Disease for Optimum Cardiovascular Prevention is a pragmatic randomized clinical trial nested within the Västerbotten Intervention Program, a CVD screening and prevention program in Sweden with 60% to 70% participation rates and small social selection bias. A total of 4177 individuals aged 40, 50, or 60 years participating in the Västerbotten Intervention Program who had low to moderate risk of CVD were invited to enroll in this trial from April 29, 2013, to June 7, 2016. Prescriptions for all participants were monitored for 465 days after the intervention. Data analysis was conducted from December 6, 2019, to April 2, 2020. Participants and their family physicians were randomly assigned 1:1 to receive or not receive pictorial information from carotid ultrasonographic determination of vascular age, assessed as carotid intima-media thickness and the presence of carotid plaques, combined with a follow-up call to participants by nurses. Two outcome measures of prescriptions of antihypertensive and lipid-lowering drugs within 465 days after ultrasonography was performed. Data obtained through intention-to-treat analysis are presented as proportions of individuals with a prescription among those who had no baseline prescription for agents from these drug classes. Of the 4177 individuals invited to enroll, 3532 participants were randomized and included in the analysis; 1870 (52.9%) were women, 2278 (64.5%) were aged 60 years, 978 (27.7%) were 50 years, and 276 (7.8%) were 40 years. First prescriptions of lipid-lowering drugs were higher in the intervention group vs the control group among men (118 of 639 [18.5%] vs 38 of 692 [5.5%]; P < .001) and women (126 of 804 [15.5%] vs 38 of 817 [4.7%]; P < .001). There were no significant differences in the proportion with prescription of antihypertensive drugs in the intervention vs control groups after ultrasonography among men (58 of 482 [12.0%] vs 56 of 528 [10.6%]; P = .47) and women (60 of 612 [9.8%] vs 64 of 615 [10.4%]; P = .73). The findings of this trial demonstrate that provision of pictorial information on vascular age and carotid plaques based on the results of ultrasonographic examination increased physician prescription of lipid-lowering drugs but not antihypertensive drugs within the following 465 days. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01849575.

Highlights

  • Both therapeutic drugs and lifestyle changes are effective in prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD), preventive drugs are often underused.[1]

  • We investigated whether factors other than vascular age and plaques were associated with prescription of lipid-lowering or antihypertensive drugs

  • From April 29, 2013, to June 7, 2016, 3532 participants were recruited to enroll in VIPVIZA, of whom 1870 (52.9%) were women, 2278 (64.5%) were aged 60 years, 978 (27.7%) were 50 years, and 276 (7.8%) were 40 years

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Summary

Introduction

Both therapeutic drugs and lifestyle changes are effective in prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD), preventive drugs are often underused.[1]. Randomized clinical trials on the use of pictorial information from cardiovascular imaging are few and often small, or imaging results are given verbally or as text or numbers.[10,11]

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