Polypill to be tested in new heart disease trial

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Researchers will be exploring whether a new, very low cost, one-a-day combined 'polypill' could reduce the risk of heart attacks, strokes and other cardiovascular problems across the world, in a major new international trial that launches today.

Cardiovascular disease is the world's biggest killer and the leading cause of loss of healthy life years.

The new 'Red Heart Pill' contains low-dose aspirin, a statin and two blood pressure-lowering medicines in a single polypill. It is expected to be substantially cheaper than existing medications to combat cardiovascular problems.

Researchers are now recruiting 2,000 volunteers who are at high risk of heart attack or stroke, or who have already had such a cardiovascular event, for a two-year trial of the Red Heart Pill.

The trial - called UMPIRE (Use of a Multidrug Pill In Reducing cardiovascular Events) - launches today in London in the UK and at other centres in Ireland, the Netherlands and (pending regulatory approval) in India.

Related trials began earlier in the year in New Zealand and Australia and plans for further trials are also underway in Brazil, Canada, China and South Africa. Collectively these parallel trials will include around 7,000 participants in ten countries and can thereby evaluate the potential of the polypill treatment strategy to prevent cardiovascular events.

The researchers behind the trial will be investigating whether patients are more likely to stick with a preventive treatment regime using a single, one-a-day polypill, rather than multiple tablets. The researchers will also be exploring whether the Red Heart Pill is effective at reducing blood pressure and lowering cholesterol.

If the treatment strategy is effective, the researchers plan to establish how the polypill could be made available to people on low incomes in countries like India, where 80% of health care is paid out of pocket and the majority of people do not currently have access to cardiovascular drugs.

It is expected that the Red Heart Pill could be made available in low-income countries at a substantially lower cost than separate medications, providing a cost-effective approach that could potentially save millions of lives across the world.

In countries like the UK, where heart medications are more readily available, the researchers want to explore whether the Red Heart Pill could provide a more convenient alternative to existing medications. In the UK, the medications contained in the polypill are currently prescribed individually. Such preventive treatments are recommended by doctors, because they can more than halve the risk of cardiovascular events, but evidence shows that at present many people who start on these medicines do not continue to take them in the long term. 

Professor Simon Thom, the co-Principal Investigator on the study from the National Heart and Lung Institute at Imperial College London, said: "The polypill idea is really simple: make it easier for people to get the medication they need by giving them just one polypill to take each day, rather than lots of different pills that may need to be taken at different times. It's likely that combining medications in one polypill could enable people in low-income countries to have easy access to cheap preventive medication. 

"Polypills are being used successfully to treat other diseases like tuberculosis and HIV, but we don't yet know whether they could be effective in those with cardiovascular problems. The UMPIRE trial aims to test whether the polypill does help people take their cardiovascular medicines in the long term and whether there are any unintended problems with this approach," he added.

The UK arm of the trial is being run by Imperial College London, with patients being recruited through clinics at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust. The College and Trust are partners in an Academic Health Science Centre (AHSC), which aims to improve the quality of life of patients and populations by taking new discoveries and translating them into new therapies as quickly as possible.

Volunteers who are interested in taking part in the trial at one of the participating international centres can find out more by visiting the trial website at www.spacecollaboration.org

The partners in UMPIRE are Imperial College London, UK, with patients being recruited through clinics at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust; the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland; University Medical Centre Utrecht, The Netherlands; The George Institute, India; the Centre for Chronic Disease Control in New Delhi, The  Public Health Foundation of India; The George Institute for International Health, Sydney; and Dr Reddy's Laboratories, India.

The UMPIRE project has received funding from the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under Grant Agreement  #241849.

Comments

  1. Charles C. Richards, M.D. FACN, FACA Charles C. Richards, M.D. FACN, FACA United States says:

    Multidrug pills were anathema not too many years ago because someone with knowledge (a rare commodity amongst today's health professionals) regognized that there can be significant differences between doses and drugs required to treat a multitude of individuals, and a single pill cannot meet the challenge. Now we have a regression of intelligent and reasonable thinking to come up with a "Polypill" that will do minimal or nothing for patients but will continue to enrich the pharmaceutical industry, the industry which by default now educates (brainwashes) the medical professions practitioners. American doctors no longer are taught how to treat "causes" (too demanding of precious time!), they only know how to focus on "symptoms", because the pharmaceutical industry wants it this way. After all, if causes can be prevented or corrected, there will be much less need for pharmaceuticals that just treat the symptoms. American medicine is a high-tech, costly, low efficiency, wrongly motivated and declining profession. It has been said that no great civilization can be conquered from the outside until it has destroyed itself from within. The same is true of the once-great American medicine profession.

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
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