At this year’s AHA Scientific Sessions, we presented findings from our systematic review and meta-analysis evaluating the impact of polypills – single pill combinations of common preventive cardiac therapies – on cardiovascular outcomes and risk factors. Globally today, cardiovascular disease is on the rise, with optimal risk reduction therapies not reaching most at-risk adults due to failures to prescribe evidence-based treatments and patient barriers to adherence to recommended therapies. Although polypills have long been theorized to have the potential to dramatically improve cardiovascular risk reduction in low- and middle-income countries due to their ease of use for providers and patients alike, data supporting this approach have been sparse until recently.
Therefore, we performed a systematic search to identify randomized controlled trials that examined the associations between polypill therapy and cardiovascular outcomes and all-cause mortality. We identified eight high-quality randomized control trials published between 2013 and 2020, which collectively enrolled 25,584 participants, had a median follow up of about three years, and reported on major adverse cardiovascular events (such as cardiovascular death, acute coronary syndromes, stroke, heart failure, myocardial infarction, cardiac arrest, arterial revascularization, and angina). Included trials represented both primary and secondary prevention applications of the polypill and were primarily set in low- and middle-income countries, though seven of the trials included at least one high-income country. We additionally evaluated the effect of the polypill strategy on clinically relevant secondary endpoints, including the risk of all-cause mortality, changes in blood pressure and cholesterol, adverse therapy effects, and drug adherence and discontinuation rates.