03 بهمن 1403
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مرکز تحقیقات بیماری های کبد، پانکراس و مجاری صفراوی

دانشگاه علوم پزشکی تهران

  • تاریخ انتشار : 1403/06/20 - 14:08
  • تعداد بازدید : 17
  • زمان مطالعه : 2 دقیقه

Effectiveness of polypill for primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular diseases (PolyIran): a pragmatic, cluster-randomised trial

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:Authors

Gholamreza RoshandelMasoud KhoshniaHossein PoustchiKarla HemmingFarin KamangarAbdolsamad GharaviMohammad Reza OstovanehAlireza NateghiMasoud MajedBehrooz NavabakhshShahin MeratAkram PourshamsMahdi NaliniFatemeh MalekzadehMasoumeh SadeghiNoushin MohammadifardNizal SarrafzadeganMohammad Naemi-TabieiAbdolreza FazelPaul BrennanArash EtemadiPaolo BoffettaNeil ThomasTom MarshallKar Keung ChengReza Malekzadeh 

 

Abstract

Background: A fixed-dose combination therapy (polypill strategy) has been proposed as an approach to reduce the burden of cardiovascular disease, especially in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). The PolyIran study aimed to assess the effectiveness and safety of a four-component polypill including aspirin, atorvastatin, hydrochlorothiazide, and either enalapril or valsartan for primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease.

Methods: The PolyIran study was a two-group, pragmatic, cluster-randomised trial nested within the Golestan Cohort Study (GCS), a cohort study with 50 045 participants aged 40-75 years from the Golestan province in Iran. Clusters (villages) were randomly allocated (1:1) to either a package of non-pharmacological preventive interventions alone (minimal care group) or together with a once-daily polypill tablet (polypill group). Randomisation was stratified by three districts (Gonbad, Aq-Qala, and Kalaleh), with the village as the unit of randomisation. We used a balanced randomisation algorithm, considering block sizes of 20 and balancing for cluster size or natural log of the cluster size (depending on the skewness within strata). Randomisation was done at a fixed point in time (Jan 18, 2011) by statisticians at the University of Birmingham (Birmingham, UK), independent of the local study team. The non-pharmacological preventive interventions (including educational training about healthy lifestyle-eg, healthy diet with low salt, sugar, and fat content, exercise, weight control, and abstinence from smoking and opium) were delivered by the PolyIran field visit team at months 3 and 6, and then every 6 months thereafter. Two formulations of polypill tablet were used in this study. Participants were first prescribed polypill one (hydrochlorothiazide 12·5 mg, aspirin 81 mg, atorvastatin 20 mg, and enalapril 5 mg). Participants who developed cough during follow-up were switched by a trained study physician to polypill two, which included valsartan 40 mg instead of enalapril 5 mg. Participants were followed up for 60 months. The primary outcome-occurrence of major cardiovascular events (including hospitalisation for acute coronary syndrome, fatal myocardial infarction, sudden death, heart failure, coronary artery revascularisation procedures, and non-fatal and fatal stroke)-was centrally assessed by the GCS follow-up team, who were masked to allocation status. We did intention-to-treat analyses by including all participants who met eligibility criteria in the two study groups. The trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01271985

 

Published/Type:          2019 (2019-8-30) / Original Article

استنادات:214

 

  • Article_DOI : https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(19)31791-x
  • نویسندگان :
  • گروه خبر : کارشناس مقاله,مقاله
  • کد خبر : 277225
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