By Amit Khera, M.D., M.Sc.
Director, Preventive Cardiology
The options for drug
therapy to reduce high cardiovascular (CV) risk in those with atherosclerotic
cardiovascular disease are greatly expanding. However, for both practicing
clinicians and patients the options can be overwhelming and confusing.
To help create clarity
out of this confusion, I organized and moderated a session titled “Prevention
Beyond the Guidelines: What to Do Next,” in which a panel of leaders in the
field discussed the approach to treating high-risk secondary prevention
patients on current optimal medical therapy. Lipid-lowering therapy has
advanced beyond statins to include additional agents. Given the modest LDL-C
lowering of ezetimibe and high cost of PCSK9 inhibitors, ideal patients for
these therapies are those at very high risk (i.e., multiple prior vascular
events, CV disease and diabetes, etc.) with higher residual LDL-C despite
maximal statin therapy (i.e., ≥100 mg/dL). Various agents in both the SGLT-2
inhibitor and GLP-1 receptor agonist classes of drugs have demonstrated
significant reductions in CV events and should be considered for most patients
with diabetes and CV disease. However, the paradigm of prescribing antidiabetic
agents as CV risk-reducing therapies, rather than specifically for glucose
lowering, is foreign to cardiologists and will take time to disseminate.
Extended dual
antiplatelet therapy is also an option in patients with stable coronary artery
disease, as is the addition of low-dose rivaroxaban, which demonstrated CV
event reduction in the recent COMPASS trial. Antiplatelet and anticoagulant
therapies always incur a bleeding penalty, which creates aversion among
clinicians and requires careful patient selection to ascertain those at lowest
bleeding risk.