July 26, 2024
UCalgary study identifies key role for pharmacists in stroke risk reduction
Atrial fibrillation (Afib) is the most common heart rhythm disorder encountered in clinical practice according to Dr. Roopinder Sandhu, MD, MPH, and the leading cause of stroke in older individuals. Sandhu, a cardiac electrophysiologist and the director of the Women’s Cardiovascular Health Initiative at the Cumming School of Medicine says despite the availability of blood thinners to reduce the risk of stroke that are highly effective and safe, major gaps in the delivery of appropriate blood thinners persist leaving a large proportion of individuals at risk for stroke and other complications.
Sandhu led a study investigating whether involving community pharmacists in the prescription of appropriate blood thinners for individuals with undiagnosed or undertreated Afib could improve stroke prevention.
Dawn Smith, Libin Cardiovascular Institute
“People visit their pharmacists up to eight times more often than their physicians. Pharmacists have long-term trusted relationships with the people who come to them for medication and advice on the medications they take,” says Sandhu, first author and principal investigator. “Also, access to a pharmacist may be easier for many people than access to a family physician, especially for people in remote communities.”
The research team worked with pharmacists in 27 communities across Alberta who are specially trained in Afib and to prescribe blood thinners. The pharmacists recruited 80 patients over the age of 65 with one additional stroke risk factor such as diabetes, high blood pressure or heart failure and known, untreated Afib (no blood thinner or suboptimal dose of blood thinner) or performed screening to detect previously undiagnosed Afib.
“We set up heart health stations in participating pharmacies where people could check their blood pressure and heart rhythm using a mobile electrocardiogram (ECG), a digital tool that provides a read out of your heart rhythm. The heart rhythm readings were sent to two cardiologists for analysis,” says Miriam Fradette, co-investigator and pharmacist.
“When the cardiologists confirmed an irregular rhythm, the person was booked for another ECG through the health-care system and their doctor was notified.”
Study participants were randomized into two groups; one group was identified as the early intervention group and continued consulting with the pharmacist, the other group was advised to speak with their family doctor and their doctor was notified of Afib diagnosis.
After three months, if the second group had not seen their physician, the pharmacist worked with them directly, and kept the physician looped in. Both groups were followed for a year.
“The findings show allowing trained community-based pharmacists to prescribe to this group increased the number of at-risk individuals taking optimal stroke-preventing blood thinners by 34 per cent,” says Sandhu. “I knew there would be a difference between the groups, but I didn’t realize how large it would be.
“This collaborative care model which leverages the expertise of pharmacists could have far-reaching impact in addressing the large number of people who remain untreated or undertreated for Afib and who are at risk of stroke, particularly since several countries have moved toward pharmacist prescribing independently or through collaborative practice agreements.”
Findings are published in JAMA Open Network.
Sandhu adds it is important that the infrastructure exists where pharmacists can perform patient assessments; order and interpret labs; initiate, adjust, and monitor drug therapy; access electronic health records; and work in a collaborative care model with physicians.
Population Health Research Institute
“The results of this study offer an innovative solution to increase the uptake of evidence-based anticoagulant therapy to prevent stroke in patients with atrial fibrillation,” says Dr. Jeff Healey, cardiologist and co-investigator. “This study is the culmination of a multi-year, cross-Canada collaboration initiated by the Canadian Stroke Prevention Intervention Network (CSPIN).”
This study was funded by the Heart & Stroke Foundation of Canada, Canadian Stroke Prevention Intervention Network, University Hospital Foundation at the University of Alberta, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, National Institute on Aging, and in-kind support from AliveCor. The Epidemiology Coordinating and Research (EPICORE) Centre at the University of Alberta supported the study design and data collection. Statistical support was provided by the Alberta Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research SUPPORT Unit.
Along with UCalgary researchers, the team included clinicians, scientists, pharmacists and co-investigators from the University of Alberta (UAlberta), Canadian VIGOUR Centre, University of Toronto, and McMaster University.
Roopinder Sandhu is a clinician-scientist and professor in the Department of Cardiac Sciences at the Cumming School of Medicine (CSM). She is a member of the Libin Cardiovascular Institute (LCI) at the CSM and holds the Martha Brauer Chair in Women’s Cardiovascular Health Research. Sandhu serves as the director of the LCI’s Women’s Cardiovascular Initiative and Health Clinic.
Jeff Healey is a clinician-scientist and professor in the Department of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, McMaster University. He is a senior scientist at the Population Health Research Institute, a joint research institute of McMaster University and Hamilton Health Sciences.