Albuquerque Journal

HEART STUDY

- BY LAURA WEISS TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

Cardiac clinical trials short on diversity in age, race and gender.

Women, racial minorities, and people over 75 are underrepre­sented in the clinical trials that help determine the way all cardiac patients are treated, a study has found.

This means that the recommenda­tions that doctors use to treat heart problems may not be the best for all groups, said senior author Peter Kowey, head of Cardiology for Main Line Health in Philadelph­ia.

A team at Lankenau Heart Institute and Lankenau Institute for Medical Research in Wynnewood, Pa., laid out the disparitie­s in a research letter published online by the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

Women, minorities and the elderly could have different manifestat­ions or severity of a disease, Kowey said, so more of them need to be included in trials to create more personaliz­ed guidelines.

“We want to make sure that all can benefit without being harmed,” Kowey said.

The team looked at 653 studies involving 1.3 million patients. Those studies accounted for 20 percent of citations for acute coronary syndrome guidelines, 25 percent for atrial fibrillati­on and 28 percent for heart failure.

The paper found that while women made up 30 percent of study enrollees, they represent 55 percent, 47 percent, and 42 percent of Americans with atrial fibrillati­on, heart failure and acute coronary syndrome.

There were also fewer minorities than their percentage of heart disease patients warranted, Kowey said.

And trials often lacked anyone over age 75. By not including patients at “extremes,” the guidelines may not reflect what is safe for those groups.

“We have been mostly successful in local studies, mainly because we have the luxury of being” in a diverse area, Kowey said of his own studies. But he reported less success when chairing internatio­nal studies.

The team found that most trial patients are from North America or Europe, and only 9 percent were from Asia, South America or Australia.

The authors hope the letter will prompt changes in future trials used to set guidelines for the American Heart Associatio­n (AHA) and the American College of Cardiology (ACC).

Jeffrey Anderson, chair of the ACC/AHA Task Force on Practice Guidelines, said the groups are well aware that women, the elderly and minorities are underrepre­sented in heart trials. While most care is the same for all groups, he said, some changes may be needed, so researcher­s must do a better job finding diverse subjects.

Elliot Antman, president of the heart associatio­n, agreed. Some people might not find it easy to participat­e or want to be in trials, he noted.

One option is using electronic medical records to do studies, enabling doctors to find diverse patients at the point of care.

Mobile technologi­es can also help, he said, as the digital “Health e-Heart” study at the University of California shows. Anyone over 18 can sign up for the study online. It also has options to use social media and phone apps for data.

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