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Cardiovascular Care of Older Adults: Acute Myocardial Infarction Karen P. Alexander MD Associate Professor Medicine Duke Clinical Research Institute Duke University Medical Center Durham, NC Outline • Understand the presentation of ACS in older adults • Safe and effective therapies for ACS in older adults. • Assess likely health outcomes among older adults with ACS • Appreciate the role of discharge planning in optimizing medication safety and return to independent functioning. • Needs for future research Population Incidence of Heart Disease Cardiovascular Health Study Rate/1,000 Person-Years Caucasian Male: 10 year follow up Age (Yrs) CHD = Fatal and Non-fatal MI, Angina, coronary revascularization REF: Arnold AM, et al, JAGS 2005;53:211-218 Risk Factors for First MI INTERHEART Case- Control Acute MI; 52 countries; >30,000 pts Young Old* Smoking 3.33 (2.86 - 3.87) 2.44 (2.10 – 2.84) HTN 2.24 (1.93 – 2.60) 1.72 (1.52 – 1.95) Diabetes 2.96 (2.40 – 3.64) 2.05 (1.71 – 2.45) Abdominal Obesity 1.79 ( 1.52 – 2.09) 1.50 (1.29 – 1.74) Lipids: ApoB/ApoA1 4.35 ( 3.49 – 5.42) 2.50 (2.05 – 3.05) Fruits and Vegetables 0.69 (0.58 – 0.81) 0.72 (0.61 – 0.85) Exercise 0.95 (0.79 – 1.14) 0.79 ( 0.66 – 0.94) Alcohol 1.00 (0.85 – 1.17) 0.85 (0.73 – 1.00) Psychosocial Stress 2.87 ( 2.19 – 3.77) 2.43 (1.86 – 3.18) Pop. Attributable Risk * Old = Men >55 yrs; Women >65 yrs 93.9% 87.9% REF: Yusuf et al, Lancet 2004;364:937-52 % ≥ 85 years Age ≥ 85 among the Myocardial Ischemia National Audit Project (MINAP) Registry Year Rosengren EHJ 2012:33:562 MINAP: Final MI Diagnosis AGE AGE Gale, EHJ 2012;33:630-639 1975/78 (REF) – 1993/95 Worcester Heart Attack Study OR for In-hospital Mortality Controlling for gender, med history, AMI type, complications MI Type QW NQWMI Age (yrs) 55-64 65-74 75-84 ≥85 (REF) 1975/78 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 0.89 0.23* 0.55* 0.48* 0.93 Case Fatality = 21% Median Age = 66 yrs 1993/95 0.33* Case Fatality = 11% Median Age = 74 yrs *Significant REF: Goldberg, AJC 1998:82:1311-1317; Furman, J ACC 2001;37:1571-80 Time Trends 2003 (REF) – 2011 (MINAP Registry) OR In-Hospital Mortality By Age NSTEMI (2003) (2010) Mort. RR <55 yrs 1.9% 0.9% 0.89 (0.48-1.34) >85 yrs 31.5% 20.4% 0.56 (0.42-0.73) STEMI (2003) (2010) Mort. RR <55 yrs 2.0% 1.5% 0.72 (0.39-1.25) >85 yrs 30.1% 19.4% 0.56 (0.38-0.75) Gale, EHJ 2012;33:630-639 MINAP: NSTEMI In-Hospital Mortality Adj. for Age, DM, HTN, CAD hx, HF, ward (REF: Age <55yr) Adj. Odd Ratio (95% CI) MEN Years Years Gale, EHJ 2012;33:630-639 450 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 10% Efficacy (RRR) 30 25% Efficacy (RRR) 25 1 Yr mortality 20 15 10 5 1 year Mortality* Number Needed to Treat Mortality and NNT Relationships 0 <50 50-64 65-74 75+ Patient Age (Yrs) *Mortality Estimates based on AMI patients treated in Ontario from 1997-2000 Alter, AJM, 2004 Applying Guidelines Out of the Box Trials Benefits Risks 62 Age – – – – – Disease Severity Comorbidity Community 69 Do they resemble patients in trials? Is dosing and delivery of treatment similar? Do conditions of aging dynamically alter treatment effect? Do treatment risks outweigh benefits? Do expected outcomes match desired outcomes? REF: Tinetti, NEJM 2004; 351: 2870-2874 Older Adults: Comorbidity and Dysfunction 50 45 40 % of population 35 CHF Renal Insuff Stroke Frailty* Cognitive Impairment 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 <65 65-74 75-84 Patient Age 85+ * Frailty: Fatigue, Slow Gait, Weak Grip, Wt loss >10 lbs, Low Activity REFS: JACC 2005;46: 1479-87; CHS J Geront Biol Sci 2001; Canadian Health and Agin Older Adults: Disability Canadian Study of Health and Aging 9,008 Community Dwelling Seniors Basic (physical) and Instrumental (functional) ADLs REF: Griffith L, et al. Age and Ageing 2010;39:738-745 Frailty Phenotype Features: Weakness, Muscle Wasting, Cognitive Impairment, Depression, Nutrition, Isolation, Low Physical Function, Fatigue Comorbidity (>2 conditions) 66% Frailty Disability 25% Age (yrs) Life Years Prevalence >65 >25 ~8% 70 19.3 15% 75 11.7 28% 80 8.9 32% 85 6.6 38% 90 4.8 40% 27% (>1 ADL) Heterogeneity of Aging • Biological Phenotype – – – – – Cumulative comorbidity counts Cognitive Impairment Disability Functional Status Visual and Hearing Impairments • Physiologic Phenotype Jeanne Calment (Photo Age 113) Lived to 122 years, Arles France – – – – – ↓ Blood vessel integrity and response to injury ↓ Vascular Compliance D-dimer and inflammatory markers increase Altered Clotting (low platelet turnover) ↑ Thrombin, Fibrinogen, Factors IX, X REF: http://entomology.ucdavis.edu/courses/hde19/lecture3.html Unmasking Narrow Reserves DECLINES OF FUNCTION NSTEMI CHALLENGES TO HOMEOSTASIS • Less resilient to acute disease • Less resilient to drug effects Fries, 1981 CAD Limiting Reserves CHALLENGES TO HOMEOSTASIS CAD Treatment • Cardiac disease was major health limitation • Treatment enables resumption of function Fries, 1981 Non-CAD Limiting Reserves CHALLENGES TO HOMEOSTASIS • Underlying comorbidity impairs function • Non-cardiac disease limits survival Fries, 1981 Unmasking Narrow Reserves DECLINES OF FUNCTION NSTEMI CHALLENGES TO HOMEOSTASIS • Less resilient to acute disease • Less resilient to drug effects Fries, 1981 Older Adults (≥75 y) = Special Population Presentation Atypical Under treated (Under studied) Independent risk Mortality Independent risk Bleeding Multiple Coexisting Conditions Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes REF: Anderson J, NSTEMI Guidelines. JACC 2007;50:652–726; Tinetti, NEJM 2004; 351: 2870 Presenting Signs by Age CRUSADE : Signs of CHF NRMI 2-4 : EKG non-diagnostic (RBBB or other) 50 45 % Population 40 35 30 Signs of CHF EKG non-diagnostic 25 20 15 10 5 0 <65 yrs 65-74 yrs 75-84 yrs Patient Age >84 yrs ED Presenting Signs and Symptoms Chart Review from CRUSADE (n=607) 100 90 80 All P<0.05 <75 Years N=468 >=75 Years N=182 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Chest Pain Other* Hypoxia or Tachy Anemia *Other: Dizziness, Palpitations, Abdominal Pain, Headache, Altered Mentation Nursing Home: 10 v. 2% (p<0.01) Krashnewski, AHA Outcomes Abs. Submitted Universal MI Definition Type I: Spontaneous MI atherosclerotic plaque rupture with thrombus in one or more of the coronary arteries. Type 3: Sudden Death MI Thrombus Type 2: Secondary MI Sudden cardiac death with or without ECG changes or biomarkers can be TYPE I a condition other than CAD contributes to increased myocardial oxygen demand or decreased myocardial blood flow. obtained. Type 4/5: Revasc MI Peri-procedural injury associated with instrumentation of the heart during revascularization, either PCI or CABG. Procedures TYPE 2 Heart Failure Anemia Tachyarrhythmia Renal Failure REF: Thygesen K, JACC 2007;27:2173 2011 UA/NSTEMI Guidelines : Special Population Section I IIa IIb III I IIa IIb III Older adults with UA/NSTEMI should be evaluated and treated for acute and discharge therapies in a similar manner as younger adults Attention should be given to adjusting anti-platelet and anticoagulant doses based on weight and renal function (eg. estimated creatinine clearance) in older adults. Decisions on management of older adults should not be based solely on chronologic age but should be patient-centered, with consideration given to general health, functional and cognitive status, comorbidities, life expectancy, and patient preferences REF: Circulation. 2011;123:000-000. NSTEMI – Case 55yo ♀ 85yo ♀ Presents with SOB, CP no prior cardiac hx BP: 130/89 mmHg Weight: 238 lbs EKG: Sinus 95, TWI laterally Creat 1.0, HCT 33% BP: 165/75 mmHg Weight: 108 lbs EKG: Sinus 95, LVH, TWI laterally Creat 1.0, HCT 33% Comorbidities: HTN GERD Obesity Smoking Comorbidities: HTN Prior stroke HF NEF OA ASA, 2L O2 NC, Nitro, Beta Blocker Troponin + Older Adults: Conservative v. Invasive I IIa IIb III Older patients face increased early procedural risks with revascularization relative to younger patients, yet the overall benefits from invasive strategies are equal to or perhaps greater in older adults. REF: Anderson J. J Am Coll Cardiol 2007;50:652-726 Older Adults: Benefit of Invasive Care (TACTICS TIMI 18) Event Rate (%) OR Age Group (n) Cons. Inv. (Inv v. Cons) ≤55 y (716) 4.8 5.0 1.07 56-65 y (614) 9.1 7.6 0.82 66-75 y (612) 10.3 7.8 0.73 ≥75 y (278) 21.6 10.8 0.44* NNT = 67 NNT = 9 * P <0.016 0 0.5 Invasive Better 1 1.5 Conservative Better DEATH or MI at 6 mo Source: Bach AIM 2004; 141:186-195 2.0 NSTEMI – Case 55yo ♀ 85yo ♀ IV heparin: 5000 U then 1000 U/hr Cath Lab: LCX 95% hazy IV Integrelin, Drug-eluting stent Appropriate Heparin Appropriate Integrilin Excess Heparin (3000 U/ 600 U/hr) Excess Integrelin CrCl=98 ml/min CrCl = 30 ml/min Creatinine 1.0 mg/dl Creatinine 1.0 mg/dl Weight 238 lbs Weight 108 lbs *Based on Heparin 60 U/kg bolus and 12 U/kg infusion, cap 4000/1000 and Integrilin reduced infusion dose if CrCl <50ml/min 2011 UA/NSTEMI Guidelines : Special Population Section I IIa IIb III Attention should be given to adjusting antiplatelet and anticoagulant doses based on weight and renal function (eg. estimated creatinine clearance) in older adults. REF: Circulation. 2011;123:000-000. Excess Antithrombotic Dosing Avoidable Risk 70 64.5 % Excessive Dose 60 50 37 38.5 40 28.7 30 20 33.1 12.5 12.8 16.5 8.5 10 0 LMW Heparin < 65 yrs UF Heparin 65-75 yrs GP IIb/IIIa >75 yrs REF: Alexander KA, JAMA 2005 NSTEMI – Case 55yo ♀ 85yo ♀ Mortality = 0.8% Bleeding = 6.5% Mortality = 3.9% Bleeding = 18.2% Low Crusade Bleeding Risk Very High Crusade Bleeding Risk D/C home day 3 Major Bleed, transfusion, volume overload, HFNEF, bouts of afib, hemodynamic instability, Confusion, ↑ LOS *Based on Heparin 60 U/kg bolus and 12 U/kg infusion, cap 4000/1000 and Integrilin reduced infusion dose if CrCl <50ml/min CRUSADE Bleeding Score HCT (%) CrCl (mL/min) DM Female Signs of CHF PVD Heart rate SBP REF: Subherwal S. The Crusade Bleeding Score. Circulation 2009;119: Epub REF: Subherwal S. The Crusade Bleeding Score. Circulation 2009;119: Epub Major Bleeding with Antithrombotic therapy Unavoidable Risk ≥2 Antithrombotics (anti-platelet [aspirin or clopidogrel], anti-coagulant, or GP IIb/IIIa; n=50,969; c-index 0.72) <2 Antithrombotics (anti-platelet, anti-coagulant, or GP IIb/IIIa; n=5,931; c-index 0.73) REF: Subherwhal, Circ 2009;119: 1872-1882 Therapeutics in ACS Among Patients >90 Years Old Mortality Major Bleeding In-hospital Mortality by Number of Therapies Optimal 20 % major bleeding** 30 25 % mortality Major Bleeding by Number of Therapies 20 15 10 5 0 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 None One Two Three Four Five Number of Recommended Therapies* (p<0.001 for trend) Age 75-89 Age 90 and older None One Two Three Four Number of Recommended Therapies* (p<0.01 for trend) (CABG Pts and contraindications excluded) Five Age 75-89 Age 90 and older Even among oldest old – better outcomes with better adherence to ACC/AHA Guidelines (1) Acute Aspirin, (2) Acute Beta-blockers, (3) Acute Heparin, (4) GP IIb/IIIa inhibitors with PCI, (5) Cardiac Catheterization <48 hours - Skolnick et al, JACC 2007 ACUITY: Major Bleeding in PCI Cohort Strategy Matters P=0.00 1 P<0.001 % Major Bleeding Events 18% 16% 14% Hep + GPI Age <55 – NNT 38 P=0.010 10% 6% 4% 16.5 Biv alone NNT to prevent one major bleed 12% 8% Biv + GPI P=0.007 P=0.033 Age >75P=0.001 – NNT 16 P=NS 6.7 6.6 P=0.006 12.3 6.1 5.5 5.7 4.2 4.3 4.2 3.0 2% 1.7 0% <55 55-64 65-74 >=75 N=2052 N=2240 N=2121 N=1376 Patient Age Excluding CABG-related bleeding REF: Lopes JACC 2009 Quality of Care for Hospitalized Elders and PostDischarge Mortality 6,392 Vulnerable Elderly Patients identified a using VES-13 Survey One year mortality based on adherence to Geriatric ACOVE Measures ACOVE Quality of Care above Median = 18% reduction in 1 year death Discharge Planning Assess Nutrition Assess Cognition Assess Mobility Mobility intervention Delerium Management Pressure Ulcer Management REF: Aurora JAGS 2010;58: 1642-1648 Quality of Care for Hospitalized Elders and PostDischarge Mortality 6,392 Vulnerable Elderly Patients identified a using VES-13 Survey One year mortality based on adherence to ACOVE Measures ACOVE Quality of Care above Median = 18% reduction in 1 year death REF: Aurora JAGS 2010;58: 1642-1648 MI – Discharge 55yo ♀ ASA, Plavix, BB, Statin 5 days returned to work Follow up appointment 1 week Enrolled in Cardiac Rehab 85yo ♀ ASA, Plavix, BB, ACEi, Statin + 6 other medications At home alone during the day No follow up appointment Sedentary, weak Discharge: Take-off and Landing • Successful Outpatient visit plan – Early Follow up Appointment (Cardiology or Medicine) – Successful communication • Return to Independent Function – Consider caregiver support, home safety • Avoid Complications, Rehospitalization – Medication Review, Education, Simplification – Symptom Education – Clear Contact Information Cardiac Rehab and Survival In Older Cardiac Patients Cardiac Rehab Participation = 21% >600,000 Medicare Beneficiaries (ICD-9: AMI, ACS, Stable CAD, CABG, PCI) to 34% lower Mortality 70,040 Propensity Matched Pairs; Regression Modeling; Instrumental Variable Analysis REF: Suaya JA et al, JACC 2009;54:25-33 2011 UA/NSTEMI Guidelines : Special Population Section I IIa IIb III Consideration should be given to patient and family preferences, quality-of-life issues, end-of-life preferences, and sociocultural differences in older patients with UA/NSTEMI. REF: Circulation. 2011;123:000-000. “What are the most important goals from the treatment of your heart disease?” 80 % Reporting in Top 3 70 N=626 60 50 40 30 Lengthen Life Maintain Mental Ability Maintain Independence 20 10 0 45-59 60-69 70-79 80+ Patient Age REF: Alexander ACC Abstract STEMI Reperfusion REF: Bueno, EHJ 2010;54:25-33 Conclusions Chronologic age ≠ biologic age Treatment recommendations similar…. – Age 75 is cut point for altered paradigm of care – Comorbidities, altered physiology, function alter risk/benefit – Avoid errors of omission and commission – Dosing and delivery matter…perhaps more – Avoid hazards of hospitalization, transitions of care Extending EBM to personalized care … – – – – More representative trials Best practice recommendations Explicit discussions of patient goals for treatment Transitions of Care, Goals of Care Older Adult Cardiologist OUTCOMES Corinth Canal: Isthmus 5 miles long between Greece and Peloponnesus Future Directions – Advance Science • Adding Key data elements to large registry work • Comorbidity: non-cardiac issues that alter cardiac management • Physiology (Vascular Stiffness, HF NEF, Sinus node dysfunction) • Genetics (Telomere length, genetic aging) – Advance “Best Practice” and systems research • Drug Safety • Care models, collaboration • Transitions of care – Broaden perspectives on goals of care • Functional Status and recurrent procedures