Heart care lacking for those with clogged leg blood vessels
Newswise — Despite the
fact that clogged arteries in the legs usually mean clogged
arteries near the heart, doctors often fail to give
heart-protecting drugs to people with severe leg blood
vessel blockages, a new University of Michigan-led study
finds.
This lack of preventive
care in such patients, who are at high risk for a heart
attack or stroke, means that more effort is needed to
improve the way doctors and patients deal with an often
body-wide problem of clogged blood vessels, the researchers
say.
In a presentation at the
American Heart Association’s annual Scientific Sessions, U-M
Cardiovascular Center researchers will show data on 553
patients who came to five Michigan hospitals for procedures
to re-open clogged blood vessels in their legs and abdomens.
Such blockages are called peripheral artery disease or PAD.
The study shows that among
such patients, those who also had a history of heart
problems were more likely to receive drugs to lower their
cholesterol and blood pressure, compared with those who
hadn’t had heart problems.
“Patients who have severe
PAD but haven’t experienced heart-related problems are
under-treated when it comes to medical therapy, especially
statin drugs to lower cholesterol,” says senior author P.
Michael Grossman, M.D., an assistant professor of
cardiovascular medicine who leads the project that produced
the new data. “This is despite the fact that national
guidelines recommend physicians treat PAD with the same
aggressive medical treatment as they treat coronary artery
disease.”
The patients in the study
were all having procedures called peripheral vascular
interventions or PVIs, which are nearly identical to
angioplasty and stenting procedures performed in blocked or
narrowed heart arteries. PVIs are performed on hundreds of
thousands of Americans each year, to open blocked arteries
in the legs and abdomen that cause disabling leg pain or
kidney problems.
Millions more Americans
have less-severe blockages, which still put them at higher
risk for heart attack and stroke even if they haven’t had a
history of heart problems. As many as 20 percent of adults
may have PAD, but most don’t know it — instead thinking that
“old age” is making their legs hurt or feel weak when they
walk or rest.
Once diagnosed, the first
treatment for PAD patients is to exercise, lose weight and
stop smoking — the same actions that are known to help their
hearts. But medicines such as blood thinners, cholesterol
drugs, ACE inhibitors and beta blockers, and procedures such
as PVI, are used when lifestyle changes don’t do enough.
Other treatments are
currently being developed, including experimental approaches
that use gene therapy or other biological agents to try to
encourage the growth of new blood vessels that could take
over for blocked vessels.
At the AHA meeting,
Grossman will present results from a multicenter clinical
trial he co-led with sponsorship from a company called
Valentis. The trial, which compared a pair of Valentis
products against one of the products alone, did not show a
difference between the two groups of patients with severe
leg pain from PAD in terms of the amount of time they could
tolerate walking on a treadmill 180 days after treatment.
But the study did show
that both groups improved about 34 to 37 percent, including
those who had only received a molecule called a poloxamer
that may help repair tissue and reduce inflammation. The
other group received the poloxamer together with an injected
gene for a protein that stimulates blood vessel growth. Now,
Grossman leads a trial at U-M comparing poloxamer against
placebo.
Other research on agents
that might encourage vessel growth is under way or will be
soon at the U-M Cardiovascular Center. In the meantime, the
PVI project continues to track current treatment.
Grossman notes that the
multi-hospital PVI registry that produced the new data is
giving him and other researchers a new way to look at how
patients with severe PAD are treated — before, during and
after their artery-opening procedures. It also surveys
patients on their quality of life.
The registry, based at
U-M, pools data from all the hospitals, and allows
researchers to analyze trends and patterns across large
groups of patients — and to look at how well doctors are
following national guidelines on PAD treatment. Eight
hospitals, including one in Minnesota, have joined the
registry, which now includes data on more than 1,000
patients for the entire year following their PVI.
“For the first time, we
have a unique opportunity to track how these patients do,
and ask important questions about their treatment and its
relation to their health, using data from multiple
hospitals, and physicians from multiple specialties,” says
Grossman. He explains that PVI procedures, which are
minimally invasive, can be done by specially trained
cardiologists, specially trained radiologists, and by
vascular surgeons, who also perform open operations called
bypasses on PAD patients.
The data are being
presented at AHA by U-M cardiology fellow Noah Jones, M.D.
They come from patients treated with PVI between 2002 and
2005 at U-M and four other hospitals. Of the 553 patients,
405 had a history of heart attack, chest pain, angioplasty
or stenting on their heart arteries, or heart bypass
surgery. The other 148 had no history of heart-related
problems and procedures.
Before their PVI
procedure, 91 percent of the heart patients were taking
blood-thinning drugs such as aspirin or clopidogrel to
prevent the formation of dangerous clots, compared with 83
percent of patients with no heart history. An even larger
gap in statin use was seen: 65 percent compared with 51
percent of non-heart patients. And beta blockers, which
lower blood pressure and heart rate, were used in 62 percent
of heart patients, compared with only 42 percent of
non-heart patients.
These differences narrowed
a bit once the patients had had their PVIs and were
recuperating in the hospital. But a month after the patients
went home, the gap widened again — suggesting that the
patients with no history of heart disease weren’t sticking
to their medication regimens and that their doctors could do
a better job of monitoring and encouraging their use of the
drugs.
“The majority of patients
with PAD die from heart attacks, heart failure or strokes,
so we need to help as many patients as possible get
screened, understand their risk, change their lifestyle and
receive treatment that’s in line with national guidelines,”
says Grossman.
The research and registry
are funded by the U-M Health System and unrestricted grants
from the Mardigian Foundation and Bristol Myers Squibb.
Grossman also has an appointment at the VA Ann Arbor
Healthcare System.