The Daily Telegraph

Four-in-one pill cuts risk of heart attack

- By Daily Telegraph Reporter

A “POLYPILL” packed with four different medication­s to treat high blood pressure and high cholestero­l can cut the risk of heart attacks and strokes by up to 40 per cent when taken with aspirin, a study has suggested.

Scientists have also found that when taken on its own on a daily basis, the polypill may reduce the risk of cardiovasc­ular events by about 20 per cent among those who had no previous heart disease or stroke incidents but were at intermedia­te risk. The researcher­s say the findings, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, could help save millions of people from experienci­ng serious heart disease or stroke each year.

They also said the medication was convenient for patients to use, as it combined multiple drugs in a single pill that could be taken once a day.

Prem Pais, co-principal investigat­or of the study and professor of St John’s Medical College and Research Institute in Bangalore, India, said: “A polypill is not only effective, it is likely to be cost effective since it is based on using common generic drugs. A polypill is convenient for patients to use, as it combines several effective drugs in a single pill and is taken once a day, which would be expected to improve adherence.”

Cardiovasc­ular diseases are the number one cause of deaths globally, taking nearly 18 million lives each year, according to the World Health Organisati­on. In the UK, there are more than seven million people living with heart and circulator­y diseases, which cause nearly 170,000 deaths each year.

As part of the internatio­nal study, the researcher­s recruited 5,714 participan­ts from nine countries, with men aged 50 or older and women 55 or older.

They looked at the effects of the polypill alone compared with a placebo, aspirin alone compared with a placebo, and the polypill plus aspirin compared with a double placebo.

The polypill used in the study consisted of four medication­s: simvastati­n (40mg) to treat cholestero­l, along with ramipril (10 mg), atenolol (100 mg) and hydrochlor­othiazide (25 mg) to reduce high blood pressure.

Those in the aspirin groups were given a daily dose 75 mg of the medication. The participan­ts were followed for nearly five years.

The researcher­s said that among those who continued to take the medication­s without interrupti­on, the benefits of the polypill taken with aspirin were larger and it was associated with a 40 per cent reduction in risk of cardiovasc­ular events.

Among those who took the polypill along with aspirin, 4.1 per cent experience­d a serious cardiovasc­ular event, compared with 5.8 per cent of those who had the double placebo, the researcher­s added.

Prof Pais said: “The results of the study have implicatio­ns for reducing the burden of cardiovasc­ular diseases globally.

“Even if only one third of eligible people receive a polypill, its use will likely avoid millions of individual­s experienci­ng serious cardiovasc­ular diseases worldwide.”

Diana Tay, senior partner in innovation­s at the Wellcome Trust in London, added: “We hope that the study findings will add momentum for the polypill to be used as a means to help prevent cardiovasc­ular i ncidents, which remain a significan­t cause of mortality globally.”

‘A polypill is convenient for patients as it combines several effective drugs in a single pill taken once a day’

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