Elderly patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS)
Emphasizes the need for proportional enrollment of elderly patients in ACS trials and highlights geriatric-specific considerations like frailty, cognitive impairment, and renal function.
Although a few recent trials have described treatment effects in older patients, others continue to exclude patients on the basis of age. Going forward, prospective trials should enroll elderly subjects proportionate to their prevalence among the treated population to define risk and benefit. Findings from age subgroup analyses should be reported in a consistent manner across trials, including absolute and relative risks for efficacy and safety. Outcomes of particular relevance to the elderly, such as quality of life, physical function, and independence, should also be considered. Creatinine clearance should be calculated for every elderly patient to enable appropriate dosing. In addition, physicians need an understanding of conditions unique to older patients (eg, frailty, cognitive impairment) that influence treatment goals and outcomes. With these efforts, treatment risks can be minimized, and benefits can be placed in the health context of the elderly patient with ACS.
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Karen P. Alexander
General Cardiology
L. Kristin Newby
General Cardiology
Christopher P. Cannon
Preventive Cardiology
Circulation
Duke Medical Center
Wardell Armstrong (United Kingdom)
Cannon Foundation
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Alexander et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69c47d20bfa6f53a8d08678c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.107.182615