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EUROASPIRE IV: A European Society of Cardiology survey on the lifestyle, risk factor and therapeutic management of coronary patients from 24 European countries

  • Kornelia Kotseva*
  • , David Wood
  • , Dirk De Bacquer
  • , Guy De Backer
  • , Lars Rydén
  • , Catriona Jennings
  • , Viveca Gyberg
  • , Philippe Amouyel
  • , Jan Bruthans
  • , Almudena Castro Conde
  • , Renata Cífková
  • , Jaap W. Deckers
  • , Johan De Sutter
  • , Mirza Dilic
  • , Maryna Dolzhenko
  • , Andrejs Erglis
  • , Zlatko Fras
  • , Dan Gaita
  • , Nina Gotcheva
  • , John Goudevenos
  • Peter Heuschmann, Aleksandras Laucevicius, Seppo Lehto, Dragan Lovic, Davor Mili, David Moore, Evagoras Nicolaides, Raphael Oganov, Andrzej Pajak, Nana Pogosova, Zeljko Reiner, Martin Stagmo, Stefan Störk, Lale Tokgözolu, Dusko Vulic
*Corresponding author for this work
  • European Society of Cardiology
  • Imperial College London
  • Ghent University
  • Karolinska Institutet
  • Université de Lille
  • Charles University
  • Hospital Universitario La Paz
  • Thoraxcentre
  • University of Sarajevo
  • Shupyk National Healthcare University of Ukraine
  • Paula Stradina Clinical University Hospital
  • University Medical Centre
  • Victor Babes University of Medicine and Pharmacy
  • National Heart Hospital
  • University of Ioannina
  • University of Würzburg
  • Vilnius University
  • University of Eastern Finland
  • Clinic for Internal Medicine Intermedica
  • University of Zagreb
  • Tallaght Hospital
  • University of Nicosia
  • Russian Ministry of Health
  • Jagiellonian University Medical College
  • Lund University
  • Hacettepe University
  • University of Banja Luka

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

861 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Aims To determine whether the Joint European Societies guidelines on cardiovascular prevention are being followed in everyday clinical practice of secondary prevention and to describe the lifestyle, risk factor and therapeutic management of coronary patients across Europe. Methods and results EUROASPIRE IV was a cross-sectional study undertaken at 78 centres from 24 European countries. Patients <80 years with coronary disease who had coronary artery bypass graft, percutaneous coronary intervention or an acute coronary syndrome were identified from hospital records and interviewed and examined ≥ 6 months later. A total of 16,426 medical records were reviewed and 7998 patients (24.4% females) interviewed. At interview, 16.0% of patients smoked cigarettes, and 48.6% of those smoking at the time of the event were persistent smokers. Little or no physical activity was reported by 59.9%; 37.6% were obese (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2) and 58.2% centrally obese (waist circumference ≥ 102 cm in men or ≥88 cm in women); 42.7% had blood pressure ≥ 140/90 mmHg (≥140/80 in people with diabetes); 80.5% had low-density lipoprotein cholesterol ≥ 1.8 mmol/l and 26.8% reported having diabetes. Cardioprotective medication was: anti-platelets 93.8%; beta-blockers 82.6%; angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors/angiotensin receptor blockers 75.1%; and statins 85.7%. Of the patients 50.7% were advised to participate in a cardiac rehabilitation programme and 81.3% of those advised attended at least one-half of the sessions. Conclusion A large majority of coronary patients do not achieve the guideline standards for secondary prevention with high prevalences of persistent smoking, unhealthy diets, physical inactivity and consequently most patients are overweight or obese with a high prevalence of diabetes. Risk factor control is inadequate despite high reported use of medications and there are large variations in secondary prevention practice between centres. Less than one-half of the coronary patients access cardiac prevention and rehabilitation programmes. All coronary and vascular patients require a modern preventive cardiology programme, appropriately adapted to medical and cultural settings in each country, to achieve healthier lifestyles, better risk factor control and adherence with cardioprotective medications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)636-648
Number of pages13
JournalEuropean Journal of Preventive Cardiology
Volume23
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2016
Externally publishedYes

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • EUROASPIRE
  • cardiovascular prevention
  • guidelines
  • rehabilitation

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