Community pharmacist interventions are supported by extensive evidence for improving key cardiovascular disease risk factors such as hypertension, dyslipidemia, tobacco use, and elevated hemoglobin A1c.
Do community pharmacist interventions improve cardiovascular risk factors and reduce cardiovascular events?
Community pharmacist interventions are effective at improving cardiovascular risk factors, highlighting their potential role in multidisciplinary CVD prevention, despite a lack of hard clinical outcome data.
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are a leading cause of death globally. This article explores the evidence surrounding community pharmacist interventions to reduce cardiovascular events and related mortality and to improve the management of CVD risk factors. We summarize a range of systematic reviews and leading randomized controlled trials and provide critical appraisal. Major observations are that very few trials directly measure clinical outcomes, potentially owing to a range of challenges in this regard. By contrast, there is an extensive, high-quality evidence to suggest that improvements can be achieved for key CVD risk factors such as hypertension, dyslipidemia, tobacco use, and elevated hemoglobin A1c. The heterogeneity of interventions tested and considerable variation of the context under which implementation occurred suggest that caution is warranted in the interpretation of meta-analyses. It is highly important to generate evidence for pharmacist interventions in developing countries where a majority of the global CVD burden will be experienced in the near future. A growing capacity for clinical registry trials and data linkage might allow future research to collect clinical outcomes data more often.
Namara et al. (Fri,) conducted a review in Cardiovascular diseases. Community pharmacist interventions was evaluated on Cardiovascular events, related mortality, and CVD risk factors. Community pharmacist interventions are supported by extensive evidence for improving key cardiovascular disease risk factors such as hypertension, dyslipidemia, tobacco use, and elevated hemoglobin A1c.