In patients with recent acute coronary syndromes (ACS), current guidelines recommend a low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) level <55 mg/dl. Despite the widespread use of different potent lipid-lowering therapies (LLT), this goal is not always achieved, often due to poor medication adherence. In this prespecified subanalysis of the JET-LDL registry, we sought to evaluate the relationship between LDL-C targets achievement and LLT adherence in a cohort of patients hospitalized for ACS. Patients self-reported medication adherence was assessed using the Morisky Medication Adherence Scale (MMAS) at 3-months follow-up. Depending on the score obtained, the population was divided into two groups: high adherence (HA, MMAS≥6) vs low adherence (LA, MMAS<6). The occurrence of the primary-endpoint (LDL-C reduction >50% from baseline or level <55 mg/dl at 1-month) was compared between the two groups. 963 patients were included in the present analysis; in 277 cases (28.7%) a MMAS score <6 was reported (LA-group), while in the other 686 (71.3%) the score obtained was ≥6 (HA-group). No difference between the two groups was observed regarding LDL-C levels at admission and LLT prescribed at discharge. At 1-month, primary-endpoint occurred in 62.5% of cases, with a statistically significant difference between the two groups (LA 60% vs HA 65%, p-value 0.034). At multivariate logistic regression analysis, LA was identified as an independent predictor of not achieving the primary-endpoint (OR 0.48 [0.39-0.85], p-value 0.006). In conclusion, in a real-world cohort of patients with ACS, low medication adherence to LLT was a common event (28.7%), having a negative impact on LDL-C goal achievement.
Read full abstract