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National Trends in the Prescribing of Anti-Hypertensive Medications

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Title: National Trends in the Prescribing of Anti-Hypertensive Medications


1
National Trends in the Prescribing of
Anti-Hypertensive Medications
  • Jun Ma, MD, PhD
  • Research Associate
  • Mentor Randall Stafford, MD, PhD
  • Program on Prevention Outcomes and Practices

2
Background
  • Practice guidelines aim to guide physician
    practice according to the best available evidence
  • Process of translating national guidelines and
    clinical evidence into public health benefit is
    complex
  • Past studies suggest that guidelines are not
    necessarily being followed

3
Background
  • Diffusion of information from latest guidelines
    and clinical trial findings is suboptimal
  • Despite the promise of new findings, adoption
    patterns may not always serve patients
  • Use of medications lacking evidence of benefit
  • Failure to use drugs with the strongest evidence
  • Suggestion that sizable increase in drug costs
    has not provided a public health benefit

4
Antihypertensive Prescribing Magnitude of the
Problem
  • Elevated blood pressure is a major risk factor
    for heart diseases and stroke leading causes of
    death in the U.S.
  • About 50 million Americans have elevated blood
    pressure with continued increases expected
  • Antihypertensive medications cost 15 billion
    annually (10 of drug costs)

5
Objective
  • Examine the impact of JNC guidelines on
    antihypertensive prescribing by physicians in
    private practice and hospital outpatient clinics

6
Guidelines for HTN TreatmentJoint National
Commission (JNC) on Prevention, Detection,
Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood Pressure
  • JNC V recommendations (1993)
  • Diuretics and ß-blockers should be used as
    preferred first-line medications
  • JNC VI recommendations (1997)
  • Diuretics and/or ß-blockers should be used as
    first-line agents unless specific comorbidities
    compel selection of other drugs

7
Data Sources
  • U.S. ambulatory care surveys 1993-2002 by
    National Center for Health Statistics
  • National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS)
  • Nationally representative sample of patient
    visits to office-based physicians
  • National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey
    (NHAMCS)
  • Nationally representative sample of patient
    visits to hospital outpatient departments (OPDs)

8
Data Sources
  • Multistage probability sampling procedures
  • NAMCS PSU?Physicians?Patient Visits
  • NHAMCS PSU?Hospitals?OPDs?Visits
  • Annual participation rates
  • NAMCS 63-73 of selected physicians
  • NHAMCS 94-98 of selected hospitals
  • Physician/staff-recorded information on standard
    patient encounter forms

9
Study Sample
  • Hypertensive visits patient visits having a
    principal diagnosis of essential HTN
  • Sample size 645-1059(namcs)/809-1110(nhamcs)
  • National estimates 23-49M/18-37M
  • Antihypertensive drug visits hypertensive visits
    in which at least 1 antihypertensive drug was
    mentioned
  • of hypertensive visits 65-80

10
Antihypertensive Medication Classes
  • Diuretics thiazides vs. other diuretics
  • Beta/Alpha-Beta Blockers
  • Calcium Antagonists
  • ACE Inhibitors
  • Angiotensin Receptor Blockers (ARBs)
  • Alpha Blockers
  • Central-Acting Alpha-Agonists
  • Direct Vasodilators

11
Trends in Antihypertensive Prescribing, NAMCS
JNC V
JNC VI
12
Trends in Antihypertensive Prescribing, NHAMCS
JNC V
JNC VI
13
Trends in Prescribing of Diuretics, NAMCS
JNC V
JNC VI
14
Trends in Prescribing of Diuretics, NHAMCS
JNC V
JNC VI
15
Differences in Prescribing of Diuretics, NAMCS
and NHAMCS
Diuretics
Sex (ref Female) Male 0.65 (0.55 0.77)
Race (ref White) African American 1.53 (1.23 1.91)
Age (ref 20-44 y) 45-59 60-74 75 1.42 (1.05 1.91) 1.47 (1.12 1.93) 1.73 (1.23 2.43)
Time (ref 93-97) 98-02 1.07 (0.89 1.29)
16
Differences in Prescribing of ?-Blockers, NAMCS
and NHAMCS
?-Blocker
Sex (ref Female) Male 0.89 (0.74 1.07)
Race (ref White) African American 0.74 (0.57 0.95)
Age (ref 20-44 y) 45-59 60-74 75 1.01 (0.74 1.39) 0.88 (0.64 1.20) 0.86 (0.57 1.30)
Time (ref 93-97) 98-02 1.24 (1.01 1.51)
17
Guidelines for HTN TreatmentJoint National
Commission (JNC) on Prevention, Detection,
Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood Pressure
  • JNC VII recommendations (2003)
  • Thiazide diuretics should be initial choice
    either alone or in combination with drugs of
    other classes
  • ALLHAT (Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering
    Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack Trial) (Dec
    2002)
  • Thiazide diuretics are at least as effective as
    the more expensive ACE inhibitors and CCBs in
    lowering blood pressure as well as cardiovascular
    events

18
IMS Health Data
  • National Disease and Therapeutic Index
  • Nationally-based random sample of patient visits
    to office-based physicians
  • Physician-reported data on new and continuing
    medications for each diagnosis per patient visit
  • Annual sample size for HTN averaged 20,000

19
Most Recent Trends in Antihypertensive Prescribing
ALLHAT
JNC VII
20
Summary of Results
  • Changes in antihypertensive prescribing are
    generally consistent with JNC recommendations and
    clinical evidence
  • Increased prescribing of thiazide diuretics
  • Increased prescribing of ?-blockers
  • Declined prescribing of CCBs and more recently of
    ACE inhibitors

21
Summary of Results
  • Thiazides remain under prescribed despite most
    favorable cost-effectiveness
  • Immediate upswing in thiazides following the
    ALLHAT publication in December 2002 did not
    sustain
  • Impact of clinical evidence alone can be
    short-lived
  • Efforts needed to encourage widespread adoption
    of evidence-based medicine

22
Summary of Results
  • CCBs and ACE inhibitors remain the most
    frequently prescribed antihypertensive drug
    classes
  • Increasing popularity of ARBs
  • More recent market entry and associated intense
    advertising

23
Limitations
  • Visit-based data may not reflect proportions of
    use in general population
  • Lack of data necessary to assess treatment
    appropriateness at individual level
  • Lack of data on patient compliance and outcomes

24
Implications
  • Need to foster more timely and complete
    dissemination of evidence-based guidelines
  • Need to address physician adherence barriers
  • Lack of awareness or familiarity with guidelines
  • Lack of agreement with recommendations
  • Attractiveness of new therapies and pressure to
    use the latest therapy

25
Implications
  • Need to shift focus from reducing blood pressure
    (single risk factor) to prevention of CVD
    (absolute risk)
  • Need to assess the impact of evidence in the
    context of other factors that can influence
    prescribing practices

26
Thank You!
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