RESPONSE: Nurses can significantly
reduce the risk of recurrent complications in heart patients
A six-month outpatient prevention program conducted by
nurses has resulted in significant and sustained improvements in the control of
cardiovascular risk factors, including high cholesterol and high blood pressure,
in patients hospitalized for a myocardial infarction (MI) or impending MI. The
study was presented during a Hotline session at ESC Congress 2010.
The program, applied in addition to standard medical care, led to the improved
adherence to current guidelines on prevention, including lifestyle and compliance
with drug treatment. The nurses were able to increase the proportion of patients
with good control of risk factors by 40% (defined as at least seven out of nine
risk factors on target) and to reduce the calculated risk of dying in the next
10 years by about 17%.
RESPONSE (Randomized Evaluation of Secondary Prevention by Outpatient Nurse
SpEcialists) was an 11-centre randomized study designed to quantify the impact
of a nurse-coordinated outpatient risk management program on the risk of future
clinical events in patients with symptomatic coronary artery disease. The primary
endpoint was patient evaluation according to the SCORE risk score at 12 months,
with secondary endpoints assessed according to the Framingham risk score and individual
risk factors at 12 months follow-up (including lipid profile, glucose, blood pressure,
weight, waist circumference, physical activity, healthy diet, alcohol consumption).
In explaining the background to the trial, principal investigator Professor
Ron Peters from the Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, said: "Patients with
coronary artery disease are at high risk of recurrent complications and death.
Preventive care can effectively reduce this risk, and guidelines have been issued
by the American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology and the European
Society of Cardiology that target common risk factors for heart disease such as
high blood pressure, smoking, and high cholesterol.
"Together, these risk factors are associated with the development of coronary
artery disease, which remains the world's leading cause of death. At present,
a considerable gap exists between these guidelines and their application in clinical
practice. It is widely believed, both by patients and doctors, that the preventive
aspect of treatment is given insufficient priority and that new approaches are
needed to realize the full benefits of prevention. A short coaching program by
a nurse, on top of usual care, is such a new approach already found promising
in primary care."
The RESPONSE trial, which evaluated an outpatient nursing program in 11 hospital
centers in the Netherlands, included 754 patients hospitalized for an acute coronary
complication (MI or impending MI). They were randomized to either usual care alone
or usual care plus a six-month nursing intervention that included four extra visits
to the outpatient clinic. Nurses gave advice on healthy lifestyle (food choices,
physical exercise, non-smoking, weight control), and monitored major risk factors,
such as blood pressure, cholesterol and sugar levels, and use of preventive medication.
The nurses pursued specific targets as defined by the guidelines, and if necessary
drug treatment was adjusted in collaboration with treating physicians.
The primary measurement of the study was performed at 12 months, which was
six months after the last visit to the nurse. Results showed a significant improvement
in risk factor prevalence at the end of the program, with no loss of effect at
12 months.
Overall, at 12 months after the start of the program, 35% of patients in the
nursing group and 25% of patients in the control group were classified as having
good control of risk factors (defined as at least seven out of nine factors on
target). This reflects an increase of 40%. Of the risk factors targeted by the
intervention, body weight was the least successful. There was no change in weight
or waist circumference between baseline and 12 months, with no difference between
the two study groups. "This may indicate that weight loss is not a realistic
target in the first year after a coronary event," said Professor Peters,
"when priority needs to be given to several other risk factors. It remains
to be seen if later attempts might be more successful."
When the risk of death over the next ten years was calculated according to
the SCORE risk function, the nurses were able to reduce this risk by 17%.
Professor Peters noted that these results were achieved against a background
of medical care that was better than expected, with risk factor levels in the
study population more favorable than those reported in the literature - and with
excellent adherence to medication in both groups. This high level of care in the
control group, he added, may have been influenced by participation in the trial.
"The nurse program was practical and well attended by the patients,"
he said. "More than 93% of patients attended all visits to the nurse. These
findings are very encouraging and support the initiation of prevention programs
by nurses to help patients reduce their risk of future complications."
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