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Impact: Health and welfare; the GRACE risk score (derived using data from 102,000 patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) in 30 countries) identifies high-risk ACS patients more effectively than do alternative methods.
Significance: GRACE is now a reference standard and has resulted in international guideline changes. It is estimated to save 30-80 lives for every 10,000 patients presenting with non-ST elevation ACS.
Beneficiaries: Patients with ACS; the NHS and healthcare delivery organisations.
Attribution: All work was led by Fox (UoE) with co-chair Gore (University of Massachusetts) and was developed from Edinburgh-based studies.
Reach: Worldwide: guidelines adopted in more than 55 countries; >10,000 downloads of app.
Every year in the UK, 150,000 heart attacks are caused by coronary artery occlusion (blockage); worldwide, the figure is 17 million, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Since 1993, the Leicester Interventional Cardiology group has been at the forefront of research to determine how best to manage such patients. Its findings have been incorporated into official UK (2008), European (2008, 2012) and US (2008) guidelines and have helped to change the way coronary heart disease and heart attacks are treated, with the number of patients treated with primary angioplasty doubling between 2008 and 2011. By guiding service provision, supporting industrial innovation and informing clinical practice, the Unit has contributed to improved healthcare and outcomes for thousands of heart patients. Overall, one-month mortality according to European figures has fallen from 15% to 4% between 2008 and 2013.
The Acute Infarct Ramipril Efficacy (AIRE) multicentre international trial, conceived, designed, led and coordinated by Leeds was the first to show that use of early angiotensin converting enzyme Inhibitor (ACEI) therapy in patients with signs and symptoms of heart failure after an acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is associated with significantly longer survival and better quality of life. Further Leeds research showed the beneficial effects persisted long-term. The strategy of early initiation of ACEI is now a fundamental and routine part of the management of patients after AMI and has contributed to better survival and quality of life for patients around the world.
Patients with evidence of heart failure following acute myocardial infarction (AMI) have a particularly poor prognosis, with substantially increased risk of death and subsequent cardiovascular events. The Acute Infarct Ramipril Efficacy (AIRE) Randomised Controlled Trial (RCT) was an international trial designed and led by the University of Leeds. AIRE demonstrated, for the first time, that early treatment of patients with clinical evidence of heart failure following AMI with the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI) ramipril significantly improved survival and quality of life compared with placebo treated patients. The strategy of early initiation of ACEI is now a cornerstone in the management of patients suffering from AMI, leading to a global improvement in post-AMI outcomes.
Sudden cardiac death causes 4.5 million deaths worldwide each year many of which could be prevented by implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs), but these also carry risks. Research in the groups of Huang and Grace has led to diagnostic assays offering three times the predictive accuracy of current approaches in guiding cardiologists concerning indications for ICD implantation. The assay has been clinically trialled; since 2008, through the trial, the lives of three patients identified by the assay as at high risk were saved. Further work led by Grace and colleagues provided an improved, subcutaneous ICD (SICD); Grace also participated in a US-based clinical trial (NCT00399217) providing the evidence required for FDA approval supporting also later inclusion into NICE guidance. Since 2008 the SICD has been implanted in over 2500 patients in 16 countries.
Approximately 150,000 individuals suffer a myocardial infarction in the UK every year, and world-wide this figure approaches 8 million people every year. The care received by an individual during the acute phase of a myocardial infarction is an important determinant of patient survival. Oxygen therapy has been a mainstay of this acute phase treatment for almost a century.
Research conducted at Surrey highlighted important uncertainties and inadequacies about the safety of oxygen therapy, leading to a follow-up large randomised trial to further investigate this issue, as well as influencing national and international guidelines for emergency cardiac care.
Research led by Professor Harry Hemingway at UCL on the quality and outcomes of care of people with, or at risk of, cardiovascular diseases has informed guidelines and clinical management in a number of areas. The work influenced NICE guidelines on Chest pain of recent onset (CG95) with regard to the use of exercise electrocardiography (ECG) in the diagnosis of stable angina and approaches to sex and ethnicity in diagnosis. Our research also underpinned recommendations on revascularisation in the NICE guidelines on Management of stable angina (CH126). Additionally, the research has led to recommendations about the need to assess psychosocial factors including depression in people with myocardial infarction.
Impact: Health and welfare; public health studies in Sri Lanka and clinical trials in a cohort of 35,000 pesticide self-poisoning patients have led to the withdrawal of high-dose pralidoxime as a WHO-recommended treatment and bans of three toxic pesticides in Sri Lanka.
Significance: Resultant changes in clinical practice and pesticide regulation have saved 3000 lives in the last four years in Sri Lanka alone; in the rest of Asia many times this as local guidelines and practice have changed.
Beneficiaries: Patients and communities, healthcare providers, policy-makers.
Attribution: Studies designed and led, with international collaborators, by Michael Eddleston, UoE.
Reach: International, particularly Asia, changes in WHO and international guidelines on pesticide use.
Randomised placebo-controlled trials (RCTs) are the most robust way to demonstrate the effectiveness of medical therapies. The University of Glasgow's Robertson Centre for Biostatistics (RCB) is internationally renowned for its biostatistical input and leading roles on landmark RCTs of cardiovascular therapies. The findings of the BEAUTIFUL and SHIFT studies underpinned European and UK regulatory approval for a novel use of the heart-rate-lowering drug ivabradine, potentially preventing thousands of hospital admissions for heart failure every year. The IONA trial supported UK approval of generic versions of another heart drug (nicorandil), thereby enhancing cost-effectiveness for the NHS. The BEAUTIFUL, SHIFT, DOT-HF and CAPRICORN trials provided the evidence base for US, European and UK guideline recommendations, steering best practice for treatment of patients with heart disease worldwide.
Over the past 20 years, the University of Oxford's Clinical Trial Service Unit (CTSU), within the Nuffield Department of Population Health (NDPH), has conducted some of the world's largest trials and collaborative meta-analyses of trials of antiplatelet therapy, including aspirin, that have together had a major ongoing and incremental impact on the treatment and prevention of cardiovascular disease. They have helped ensure that antiplatelet therapy is widely used both in the acute care of patients with heart attacks and for the secondary prevention of heart attacks and strokes in high-risk patients. This research has been recognised as the gold standard for international guidelines, and has been instrumental in changing prescribing labelling for aspirin.