Eradicating Atherosclerotic Events by Targeting Early Subclinical Disease: It Is Time to Retire the Therapeutic Paradigm of Too Much, Too Late

被引:7
作者
Williams, Kevin Jon [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Temple Univ, Lewis Katz Sch Med, Med Res Bldg MRB,3420 N Broad St,Room 220, Philadelphia, PA 19140 USA
[2] Temple Univ, Lewis Katz Sch Med, Dept Cardiovasc Sci, Dept Med, Philadelphia, PA USA
关键词
atherosclerosis; cardiovascular disease; disease eradication; diagnostic imaging; diagnostic screening programs; response to retention theory; primordial prevention; CORONARY-HEART-DISEASE; LOW-DENSITY-LIPOPROTEIN; C-REACTIVE PROTEIN; THYROID-CANCER EPIDEMIC; MYOCARDIAL-INFARCTION; CARDIOVASCULAR RISK; YOUNG-ADULTS; CHOLESTEROL CONTROVERSY; SECONDARY PREVENTION; DIABETES-MELLITUS;
D O I
10.1161/ATVBAHA.123.320065
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Recent decades have seen spectacular advances in understanding and managing atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, but paradoxically, clinical progress has stalled. Residual risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease events is particularly vexing, given recognized lifestyle interventions and powerful modern medications. Why?Atherosclerosis begins early in life, yet clinical trials and mechanistic studies often emphasize terminal, end-stage plaques, meaning on the verge of causing heart attacks and strokes. Thus, current clinical evidence drives us to emphasize aggressive treatments that are delayed until patients already have advanced arterial disease. I call this paradigm "too much, too late."This brief review covers exciting efforts that focus on preventing, or finding and treating, arterial disease before its end-stage. Also included are specific proposals to establish a new evidence base that could justify intensive short-term interventions (induction-phase therapy) to treat subclinical plaques that are early enough perhaps to heal. If we can establish that such plaques are actionable, then broad screening to find them in early midlife individuals would become imperative-and achievable. You have a lump in your coronaries! can motivate patients and clinicians.We must stop thinking of a heart attack as a disease. The real disease is atherosclerosis. In my opinion, an atherosclerotic heart attack is a medical failure. It is a manifestation of longstanding arterial disease that we had allowed to progress to its end-stage, despite knowing that atherosclerosis begins early in life and despite the availability of remarkably safe and highly effective therapies.The field needs a transformational advance to shift the paradigm out of end-stage management and into early interventions that hold the possibility of eradicating the clinical burden of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, currently the biggest killer in the world. We urgently need a new evidence base to redirect our main focus from terminal, end-stage atherosclerosis to earlier, and likely reversible, human arterial disease.
引用
收藏
页码:48 / 64
页数:17
相关论文
共 181 条
  • [51] Prevalence, Vascular Distribution, and Multiterritorial Extent of Subclinical Atherosclerosis in a Middle-Aged Cohort The PESA (Progression of Early Subclinical Atherosclerosis) Study
    Fernandez-Friera, Leticia
    Penalvo, Jose L.
    Fernandez-Ortiz, Antonio
    Ibanez, Borja
    Lopez-Melgar, Beatriz
    Laclaustra, Martin
    Oliva, Belen
    Mocoroa, Agustin
    Mendiguren, Jose
    Martinez de Vega, Vicente
    Garcia, Laura
    Molina, Jesus
    Sanchez-Gonzalez, Javier
    Guzman, Gabriela
    Alonso-Farto, Juan C.
    Guallar, Eliseo
    Civeira, Fernando
    Sillesen, Henrik
    Pocock, Stuart
    Ordovas, Jose M.
    Sanz, Gines
    Jesus Jimenez-Borreguero, Luis
    Fuster, Valentin
    [J]. CIRCULATION, 2015, 131 (24) : 2104 - 2113
  • [52] Different Lifestyle Interventions in Adults From Underserved Communities The FAMILIA Trial
    Fernandez-Jimenez, Rodrigo
    Jaslow, Risa
    Bansilal, Sameer
    Diaz-Munoz, Raquel
    Fatterpekar, Monali
    Santana, Maribel
    Clarke-Littman, Andrea
    Latina, Jacqueline
    Soto, Ana, V
    Hill, Christopher A.
    Al-Kazaz, Mohamed
    Samtani, Rajeev
    Vedanthan, Rajesh
    Giannarelli, Chiara
    Kovacic, Jason C.
    Bagiella, Emilia
    Kasarskis, Andrew
    Fayad, Zahi A.
    Fuster, Valentin
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2020, 75 (01) : 42 - 56
  • [53] Feynman RP., 2005, Perfectly Reasonable Deviations from the Beaten Track: The letters of Richard P. Feynman, P486
  • [54] 10-Year Follow-Up After Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography in Patients With Suspected Coronary Artery Disease
    Finck, Tom
    Hardenberg, Julius
    Will, Albrecht
    Hendrich, Eva
    Haller, Bernhard
    Martinoff, Stefan
    Hausleiter, Joerg
    Hadamitzky, Martin
    [J]. JACC-CARDIOVASCULAR IMAGING, 2019, 12 (07) : 1330 - 1338
  • [55] Food and Drug Administration-USA, 2022, Table of surrogate endpoints that were the basis of drug approval or licensure
  • [56] Food and Drug Administration-USA, 2021, Statins: Drug safety communication - FDA requests removal of strongest warning against using cholesterol-lowering statins during pregnancy
  • [57] Food and Drug Administration-USA, 2018, Clinical trial endpoints for the approval of cancer drugs and biologics: guidance for industry
  • [58] Coronary heart disease mortality among young adults in the US from 1980 through 2002
    Ford, Earl S.
    Capewell, Simon
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2007, 50 (22) : 2128 - 2132
  • [59] Explaining the decrease in US deaths from coronary disease, 1980-2000
    Ford, Earl S.
    Ajani, Umed A.
    Croft, Janet B.
    Critchley, Julia A.
    Labarthe, Darwin R.
    Kottke, Thomas E.
    Giles, Wayne H.
    Capewell, Simon
    [J]. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2007, 356 (23) : 2388 - 2398
  • [60] FRIEDMAN M, 1957, P SOC EXP BIOL MED, V95, P586