Sticking
with guidelines for acute coronary syndromes
benefits even very elderly patients
Newswise — Some say age 90 is the new age 70. If
so, there’s never been a better time for elderly
patients to discuss with family and physicians
just how aggressive medical care should be in
case of a threatened or definite heart attack.
According to a study published in the May 1,
2007 issue of the Journal of the American
College of Cardiology ( JACC), patients age 90
and older who came to the emergency room with
acute coronary syndromes were less likely than
younger patients to receive recommended
treatments—but for those who did, survival was
much better.
“Having an acute coronary syndrome, even
over the age of 90, is not as dire as it
once was,” said David J. Cohen, M.D., M.Sc.,
F.A.C.C., director of cardiovascular
research at Saint Luke’s Mid America Heart
Institute, Kansas City, MO. “With optimal
medical therapy and invasive care, the
outcomes were nearly as good as in a
somewhat younger group of patients.”
Acute coronary syndrome is an umbrella diagnosis
that encompasses both a type of heart attack
known as non ST-segment elevation myocardial
infarction (NSTEMI) and unstable angina, or
chest pain. It is usually caused by a blood clot
that temporarily or partially blocks the
coronary artery.
Therapies recommended by American College of
Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines
include: aspirin, which prevents blood clotting
by interfering with platelets; heparin, a “blood
thinner” that interferes at a different point in
the blood clotting cascade; and beta blockers,
which slow the heart rate, reduce the force of
the heart’s contraction and prevent rhythm
abnormalities.
In addition, the guidelines recommend that,
within 48 hours, high-risk patients have cardiac
catheterization, a procedure that allows
cardiologists to see inside the coronary
arteries using x-rays, catheters and
high-contrast dye, and helps to determine the
need for angioplasty, stenting or surgery. These
patients should also be treated with
glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors, which
interfere with blood platelets and, therefore,
prevent clotting inside the artery during or
after the invasive procedure.
Each of these therapies has been shown to
improve clinical outcomes in patients with acute
coronary syndromes, but the studies proving
their value have generally been conducted in
younger patients. Their effectiveness in the
extreme elderly—one of the most rapidly growing
segments of the U.S. population—has not been
tested.
“The elderly have different responses to
medications and treatments than younger
patients,” said Dr. Cohen. “One of the major
goals of our study was to find out whether
proven therapies for acute coronary syndromes
would work in the extreme elderly.”
To do that, Dr. Cohen and his colleagues
analyzed data from the CRUSADE National Quality
Improvement Initiative, which recruited nearly
52,000 patients age 75 and older with acute
coronary syndromes. Of these, more than 5,500
were at least 90 years old, and 112 were at
least 100 years old. On January 1, 2007, the
CRUSADE registry was replaced by the American
College of Cardiology’s NCDR-ACTION Registry™
(Acute Coronary Treatment & Intervention
Outcomes Network). The ACC’s NCDR- Registry™ now
collects myocardial infarction data from
hundreds of hospitals across the country into
one unified platform with standardized clinical
data elements to facilitate benchmark outcomes,
and analyze treatment regimens.
Researchers found that extremely elderly
patients were often considered unsuitable for
recommended therapies. For example, doctors
noted that cardiac catheterization was
inadvisable in nearly 60 percent of patients age
90 and above, as compared to 27 percent of
patients age 75 to 89. The reason most often
cited was age itself. Even when there was no
apparent reason to consider therapy inadvisable,
extreme elderly patients were significantly less
likely to receive recommended treatments.
Doctors may have acted out of caution, rather
than age bias. CRUSADE researchers found that
anticlotting medications and cardiac
catheterization were more likely to cause
bleeding complications in extremely elderly
patients. In fact, as the number of therapies
increased from one to five, the risk of major
bleeding complications climbed from 3.5 percent
to 17.3 percent. Nonetheless, survival was also
better with increasing adherence to recommended
therapies, particularly aspirin, beta blockers
and cardiac catheterization.
“The data are telling us that that the balance
favors survival, and we have to be willing to
tolerate some increased bleeding,” Dr. Cohen
said. “We shouldn’t simply, on the basis of age,
say a person is too high-risk. We should discuss
these therapies with patients and their
families.”
Robert J. Applegate, M.D., F.A.C.C., a professor
of cardiology at Wake Forest University School
of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, said the results
of the CRUSADE analysis were encouraging but not
definitive. “These results indicate that use of
treatments recommended for younger patients with
threatened or definite heart attacks was also
effective in older patients, but at a cost of
more bleeding. Although these findings are
encouraging, it is not clear whether the better
outcomes simply reflected treatment of healthier
patients,” he said. “Treatment of threatened or
definite heart attacks in very elderly patients
should still be made on a case-by-case basis
until further studies confirm these results.”
In the meantime, bleeding risk may be minimized
by adjusting the dosage of anticlotting
medications, based on a more careful assessment
of kidney function, Dr. Cohen noted. In
extremely elderly patients, a normal blood
creatinine may give false assurance that kidney
function is normal. Calculating creatinine
clearance, which takes into account age, gender,
and body size, often paints a more accurate
picture.
“One of the things we’ve learned over the last
several years from the CRUSADE registry is the
importance of checking kidney function and
adjusting medication dosage,” Dr. Cohen said.
“Neglecting to do that really does seem to be
associated with worse outcomes.”
Dr. Cohen reports receiving research grants from
Bristol-Myers Squibb, Sanofi-Aventis, and Eli
Lilly, all companies that manufacture
anticlotting medications