Wednesday, February 4, 2004
AHA Releases Preventive Guidelines for Women
By Mike Upchurch
The American Heart Association
(AHA), with help from DCRI faculty and fellows, has released the
first guidelines
for the prevention of cardiovascular disease in women. The measures
are based on evidence from hundreds of clinical studies and will
appear in a special issue of the AHA’s journal, Circulation,
on February 10.
Heart disease is the leading killer of women in the U.S. According
to AHA estimates, 500,000 women die of heart disease or stroke in
the U.S. each year, more than the next 7 leading causes of death
combined. Though women are more likely to die within a year of a
heart attack or bypass surgery than men, heart attacks continue
to be thought of as a male problem.
"Women just don't expect to have a heart attack. They think
heart attacks are for men," said first lady Laura Bush in a
ceremony kicking off American Heart Month. "So women seek help
a lot later than men do. ... And because of that, they suffer more
damage because they get to the hospital later when they are having
a heart attack than most men do."
Heart disease can produce different signs and symptoms in women
than in men and be more difficult to diagnose accurately. Though
more women than men die of heart disease each year, according to
the National Coalition for Women with Heart Disease, women undergo
just 36% of open-heart surgeries and a third of all angioplasties.
The expert panel, selected by the heads of the AHA’s 13 scientific
councils, which wrote the recommendations chose 399 articles reporting
the results of clinical research, out of an initial pool of more
than 7000. A systematic search and summarization of these studies
was conducted by faculty at the Duke Center for Health Policy Research,
many of whom are also DCRI researchers.
The guidelines covered both lifestyle modification and changes
in preventive medication regimens for at-risk women.
One of the most anticipated guidelines in the new document warned
against hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for preventive purposes.
Research released in 2002 and 2003 showed that HRT, once thought
to prevent heart disease, actually raised the risk of heart attack
and possibly other diseases, such as breast cancer. The new AHA
guidelines used the cumulative evidence to close the case officially
on HRT for preventing heart disease.
Some of the chief lifestyle recommendations were:
- Physicians should counsel all women to quit smoking and avoid
secondhand smoke.
- Encourage at least 30 minutes of moderate exercise on “most,
and preferably all, days of the week.”
- Women with known cardiovascular disease should be evaluated
for depression and treated if appropriate. Depression has been
shown recently to have a significant affect how heart patients
fare.
- The maintenance of a healthy weight should be part of any woman’s
health plan. The guidelines say that a body mass index (BMI) between
18.5 and 24.9 is acceptable. BMI is a measure of weight in proportion
to height. The guidelines also say that women should strive to
keep a waist measurement below 35 inches.
- A heart-healthy diet that consists of low-fat, low-cholesterol
foods was recommended. Trans-fatty acids, found in commercially
fried foods and most partially hydrogenated cooking oils, are
specifically to be avoided.
- Omega-3 fatty acids, found primarily in fish, received a moderately
strong recommendation as well. Though the guidelines emphasize
adding fish to a woman’s heart-healthy diet, they also suggest
that an omega-3 supplement could be helpful.
- The guidelines also set new levels for low-, moderate- and high-risk
blood pressure and cholesterol for women.
The AHA stopped short of recommending daily aspirin for all women,
but said that those who are at intermediate or high risk for heart
disease should take a low dose of aspirin every day.
Other medication guidelines included the indefinite use of beta-blockers
for all women who had suffered a heart attack or had chronic blood
vessel blockages, as well as the use of ACE inhibitors in all high-risk
patients.
Periodically, the AHA, in conjunction with other major sponsors
such as the American College of Cardiology
and the National Heart, Lung
and Blood Institute, revamps its treatment and prevention guidelines
for various cardiovascular diseases. The revisions are done through
review of the best and most current evidence from clinical research
by experts in the field. The recommendations released today are
the first completely new set of guidelines issued in 2004.
The publication of the guidelines coincides with the launch of
the AHA’s “Go
Red For Women” campaign, aimed at boosting awareness of
heart-disease risk and the best means of prevention for women.
DCRI faculty and fellows made an integral contribution to these
first-ever guidelines for the prevention of cardiovascular disease
in women. As part of the Duke Center for Health Policy Research
team, they searched and summarized the sum of the existing research
in order to provide the expert panel the evidence on which these
new guidelines were based.
DCRI researchers on the literature search team were: Rowena Dolor,
Kristin Newby, Ken Mahaffey, Mimi Biswas, Svati Shah, John Petersen,
Jonathan Yager, Jean-Pierre Dery, and Camille G. Frazier. |