心血管疾病一级预防干预措施:系统综述总览。

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Health technology assessment Pub Date : 2024-06-26 DOI:10.3310/GJTR5006
Olalekan A Uthman, Lena Al-Khudairy, Chidozie Nduka, Rachel Court, Jodie Enderby, Seun Anjorin, Hema Mistry, G J Melendez-Torres, Sian Taylor-Phillips, Aileen Clarke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:心血管疾病是导致全球死亡的主要原因。本系统综述旨在比较不同药物和非药物干预对心血管疾病一级预防的有效性:方法:我们对 Cochrane 系统性综述数据库、MEDLINE、EMBASE 和效应综述摘要数据库进行了结构化检索,以找到从开始到 2021 年 3 月期间报告各种药物和非药物干预措施对心血管疾病一级预防效果的系统性综述。此外,还检查了纳入研究的参考文献。纳入的系统综述的方法学质量采用《多重系统综述评估 2》(Assessment of Multiple Systematic Reviews 2)工具进行评估(范围为 0-16)。对每篇纳入综述的荟萃分析结果进行了提取和叙述性描述:本研究分析了 95 篇系统综述,其中 41 篇涉及心血管健康的非药物干预措施,54 篇涉及药物干预措施。大多数综述侧重于降脂干预(25 篇)和抗血小板药物(21 篇),其次是营养补充剂、饮食干预、体育锻炼、健康促进和其他干预。在 10 篇涉及心血管死亡率的综述中,只有 1 篇显示了潜在的益处,其他综述均未发现任何效果。在 12 项荟萃分析中,有 2 项发现抗血小板对全因死亡率有益处,在 17 项综述中,有 8 项发现对主要心血管疾病事件有益处。在不同数量的综述中,降脂干预对心血管疾病死亡率、全因死亡率和主要心血管疾病事件均有有益影响。降糖药物对主要心血管疾病事件、冠心病事件和死亡率有显著疗效。然而,饮食干预、体育锻炼、营养补充剂和多糖丸的组合对主要心血管事件或死亡率的益处很小或没有显著益处:需要开展更多研究,以确定治疗效果是否因人群特征而异。本综述的研究结果应谨慎解读,因为大多数非药物干预研究都将一级预防与常规护理进行了比较,而常规护理可能包括对高危患者推荐的药物治疗(如他汀类药物和/或降压药物等)。此外,与饮食和生活方式干预相比,随机对照试验证据可能更适合研究药物干预:本综述总结了不同干预措施在心血管疾病一级预防干预随机对照试验证据方面的差异,并确定了可能从进一步研究中获益的领域。具体而言,本综述侧重于心血管疾病一级预防干预措施的随机对照试验证据。研究人员可将这些发现作为指导新干预研究的资源,并根据这些发现进行网络荟萃分析,以比较各种干预措施的疗效:本文是由美国国家健康与护理研究所(NIHR)健康技术评估(HTA)计划资助的独立研究,获奖编号为17/148/05。
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Interventions for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease: umbrella review of systematic reviews.

Background: Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death globally. The aim of this overview of systematic reviews was to compare the effectiveness of different pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions for the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease.

Methods: A structured search of the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, MEDLINE, EMBASE and the Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects archive was conducted to find systematic reviews that reported the effect of various pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions for the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease from inception to March 2021. References of included studies were also checked. The included systematic reviews' methodological quality was assessed using the Assessment of Multiple Systematic Reviews 2 instrument (range, 0-16). The outcomes of each included review's meta-analysis were extracted and described narratively.

Results: This study analysed 95 systematic reviews, including 41 on non-pharmacological interventions and 54 on pharmacological interventions for cardiovascular health. The majority of the reviews focused on lipid-lowering interventions (n = 25) and antiplatelet medications (n = 21), followed by nutritional supplements, dietary interventions, physical activity, health promotion and other interventions. Only 1 of the 10 reviews addressing cardiovascular mortality showed a potential benefit, while the others found no effect. Antiplatelets were found to have a beneficial effect on all-cause mortality in 2 out of 12 meta-analyses and on major cardiovascular disease events in 8 out of 17 reviews. Lipid-lowering interventions showed beneficial effects on cardiovascular disease mortality, all-cause mortality and major cardiovascular disease events in varying numbers of the reviews. Glucose-lowering medications demonstrated significant benefits for major cardiovascular events, coronary heart disease events and mortality. However, the combination of dietary interventions, physical activities, nutritional supplements and polypills showed little or no significant benefit for major cardiovascular outcomes or mortality.

Future work and limitations: More research is needed to determine whether the effect of treatment varies depending on population characteristics. The findings of this review should be interpreted with caution because the majority of studies of non-pharmacological interventions compare primary prevention with usual care, which may include recommended pharmacological treatment in higher-risk patients (e.g. statins and/or antihypertensive medications, etc.). In addition, randomised controlled trial evidence may be better suited to the study of pharmacological interventions than dietary and lifestyle interventions.

Conclusions: This umbrella review captured the variability in different interventions on randomised controlled trial evidence on interventions for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease and identified areas that may benefit from further research. Specifically, this review focused on randomised controlled trial evidence on interventions for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease. Researchers may use these findings as a resource to direct new intervention studies and network meta-analyses to compare the efficacy of various interventions based on these findings.

Funding: This article presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment (HTA) programme as award number 17/148/05.

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来源期刊
Health technology assessment
Health technology assessment 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
94
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Technology Assessment (HTA) publishes research information on the effectiveness, costs and broader impact of health technologies for those who use, manage and provide care in the NHS.
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