Variation in statin prescription among veterans with HIV and known atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease - 23/05/22
Résumé |
Background |
People with HIV have increased atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk, worse outcomes following incident ASCVD, and experience gaps in cardiovascular care, highlighting the need to improve delivery of preventive therapies in this population.
Objective |
Assess patient-level correlates and inter-facility variations in statin prescription among Veterans with HIV and known ASCVD.
Methods |
We studied Veterans with HIV and existing ASCVD, ie, coronary artery disease (CAD), ischemic cerebrovascular disease (ICVD), and peripheral arterial disease (PAD), who received care across 130 VA medical centers for the years 2018-2019. We assessed correlates of statin prescription using two-level hierarchical multivariable logistic regression. Median odds ratios (MORs) were used to quantify inter-facility variation in statin prescription.
Results |
Nine thousand six hundred eight Veterans with HIV and known ASCVD (mean age 64.3 ± 8.9 years, 97% male, 48% Black) were included. Only 68% of the participants were prescribed any-statin. Substantially higher statin prescription was observed for those with diabetes (adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 2.3, 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.0-2.6), history of coronary revascularization (OR = 4.0, CI, 3.2-5.0), and receiving antiretroviral therapy (OR = 3.0, CI, 2.7-3.4). Blacks (OR = 0.7, CI, 0.6-0.9), those with non-coronary ASCVD, ie, ICVD and/or PAD only, (OR 0.53, 95% CI: 0.48-0.57), and those with history of illicit substance use (OR=0.7, CI, 0.6-0.9) were less likely to be prescribed statins. There was significant variation in statin prescription across VA facilities (10th, 90th centile: 55%, 78%), with an estimated 20% higher likelihood of difference in statin prescription practice for two clinically similar individuals treated at two comparable facilities (adjusted MOR = 1.21, CI, 1.18-1.24), and a greater variation observed for Blacks or those with non-coronary ASCVD or history of illicit drug use.
Conclusion |
In an analysis of large-scale VA data, we found suboptimal statin prescription and significant interfacility variation in statin prescription among Veterans with HIV and known ASCVD, particularly among Blacks and those with a history of non-coronary ASCVD.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Graphical Abstract |
Central Illustration: Figure illustrates, (a) forest plot showing several individual-level characteristics that predict statin prescription in a multivariable regression model, (b) bar graph showing significant variation in statin prescription across VA Medical Centers – among Veterans with HIV and known ASCVD.The black boxes in (a) represent the odds ratios and the horizontal bars represent 95% confidence intervals. Each bar graph in (b) represents the percentage of statin prescription in each facility. ASCVD-atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease; ICVD - ischemic cerebrovascular disease; PAD-peripheral artery disease; CAD-coronary artery disease; CHF- congestive heart failure; CKD-chronic kidney disease; ECI - Elixhauser comorbidity index; ART- antiretroviral therapy; OR – odds ratio; VAMC – VA Medical Center.
Keywords : HIV, Human immunodeficiency virus, Cardiovascular disease, CVD, Statin, Health services, Health care quality
Abbreviations : ART, CAD, CDW, CKD, CI, CPT, HIV, ICD-9, ICD-10, ICVD, LDL-C, MOR, OR, PAD, PLWH, PI, VA, VINCI
Plan
Vol 249
P. 12-22 - juillet 2022 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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