Determining optimal strategies for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease: a synopsis of an evidence synthesis study

Uthman OA, Al-Khudairy L, Nduka C, Court R, Enderby J, Anjorin S, Mistry H, Melendez-Torres GJ, Taylor-Phillips S, Clarke A
Record ID 32018014475
English
Authors' objectives: Cardiovascular disease remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. This series of systematic reviews and meta-analyses synthesised evidence on the effectiveness, comparative effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions for primary cardiovascular disease prevention.
Authors' results and conclusions: The umbrella review found that antiplatelets reduced major cardiovascular disease events in 8/17 meta-analyses (relative risks 0.85–0.97), while statins reduced cardiovascular disease mortality (relative risks 0.71–0.89), all-cause mortality (relative risks 0.66–0.93) and major cardiovascular disease events (relative risks 0.59–0.90). sodium-glucose transport protein 2 inhibitors reduced major cardiovascular disease events by 8% (relative risk 0.92, 95% confidence interval 0.89 to 0.95) and all-cause mortality by 6% (relative risk 0.94, 95% confidence interval 0.90 to 0.98). Non-pharmacological interventions showed limited evidence, though vitamin D (relative risks 0.93–0.94) and dietary changes (relative risk 0.91, 95% confidence interval 0.85 to 0.97) had some benefits. The network meta-analysis found that antihypertensives (relative risk 0.76, 95% confidence interval 0.64 to 0.90), intensive blood pressure control (relative risk 0.66, 95% confidence interval 0.46 to 0.96), statins (relative risk 0.81, 95% confidence interval 0.71 to 0.91) and multifactorial lifestyle interventions (relative risk 0.75, 95% confidence interval 0.61 to 0.92) significantly reduced composite cardiovascular disease events and mortality. Blood pressure lowering also reduced all-cause mortality (relative risk 0.82, 95% confidence interval 0.71 to 0.94). Simulation modelling projected substantial population-level health gains. National salt reduction programmes could prevent 1900–48,000 cardiovascular disease deaths annually, while tobacco control initiatives could avert 15,500 deaths yearly. In the United Kingdom, salt reduction could prevent 4450 deaths annually, and transfat elimination could prevent 1700–3500 deaths yearly. Cost-effectiveness analyses found most interventions had incremental cost-effectiveness ratio below £20,000–30,000 per quality-adjusted life-year. However, intensive diabetes treatment and enhanced motivational interviewing exceeded £55,000/quality-adjusted life-year, indicating low value for money. This series supports antihypertensives, statins and multifactorial lifestyle interventions as core strategies for primary cardiovascular disease prevention. Policy interventions show potential for large-scale impact, and most approaches are cost-effective. Future research should prioritise head-to-head trials, implementation studies and health economic analyses to optimise prevention efforts.
Authors' methods: Five systematic reviews and meta-analyses were conducted using rigorous methods, including comprehensive searches, duplicate screening, risk-of-bias assessments and adherence to reporting guidelines. An umbrella review summarised evidence from 95 systematic reviews. A machine learning study developed a parallel Convolutional Neural Network algorithm with 96.4% recall and 99.1% precision for study screening. A network meta-analysis compared preventive strategies across 139 trials (1,053,772 participants). Simulation modelling projected the population impact of policy interventions, and a cost-effectiveness review appraised eight United Kingdom-based economic evaluations. Limitations included residual confounding, heterogeneity in simulation models and a lack of head-to-head trials for some interventions. More research is needed on non-pharmacological interventions, policy implementation and health economic analyses.
Details
Project Status: Completed
Year Published: 2025
URL for additional information: English
English language abstract: An English language summary is available
Publication Type: Full HTA
Country: England, United Kingdom
MeSH Terms
  • Cardiovascular Diseases
  • Heart Diseases
  • Primary Prevention
  • Healthy Lifestyle
  • Preventive Health Services
  • Diet
  • Access to Healthy Foods
  • Smoking Cessation
  • Alcohol Abstinence
  • Health Policy
Contact
Organisation Name: NIHR Health Technology Assessment programme
Contact Address: NIHR Journals Library, National Institute for Health and Care Research, Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre, Alpha House, University of Southampton Science Park, Southampton SO16 7NS, UK
Contact Name: journals.library@nihr.ac.uk
Contact Email: journals.library@nihr.ac.uk
This is a bibliographic record of a published health technology assessment from a member of INAHTA or other HTA producer. No evaluation of the quality of this assessment has been made for the HTA database.