European Survey of Cardiovascular Disease Prevention, Diabetes and Chronic Kidney Disease

Status: Recruiting
Location: See location...
Study Type: Observational
SUMMARY

The goal of this observational study is to provide a unique European picture of preventive action by cardiologists, other specialists and primary care physicians looking after patients with coronary heart disease (CHD), individuals at high cardiovascular disease risk and all those with hypertension, dyslipidaemia (including familial hypercholesterolaemia), diabetes and dysglycaemia and chronic kidney disease (CKD) and determine whether the European guidelines on cardiovascular disease prevention, hypertension, lipids, diabetes and chronic kidney disease are being followed.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

• Patients having signed an informed Consent

• Patients aged from 18 years old at the time of identification

• At least six and at most 24 months elapsed between the index event (the recruiting diagnostic or treatment criteria below) and the date of interview

• Patients meeting the recruiting diagnostic or treatment criteria:

• Coronary patients: Acute coronary events (acute coronary syndrome {STEMI or NSTEMI}, unstable angina) or an emergency or elective revascularisation for coronary artery disease (CABG, PCI)

• High cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk patients: patients free of CVD, who have been prescribed one or more of the following treatments: blood pressure and/or lipid-lowering and/or glucose lowering (diet and/or hypoglycaemic agents and/or insulin)

Locations
Other Locations
Turkey
Istanbul University, Cerrahpaşa Cardiology Institute
RECRUITING
Istanbul
Contact Information
Primary
Emilie Soriano
registries@escardio.org
+33489872018
Time Frame
Start Date: 2024-06-07
Estimated Completion Date: 2029-12
Participants
Target number of participants: 8000
Treatments
Hospital Arm
Patients presenting with coronary heart disease
Primary Care Arm
People at high risk of cardiovascular disease
Sponsors
Collaborators: National Institute for Prevention and Cardiovascular Health, Ireland
Leads: European Society of Cardiology

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov