TY - JOUR
T1 - Chronic coronary syndrome in Africa
T2 - Current management and service challenges, and opportunities for optimizing patient care
AU - Dzudie, Anastase
AU - Aatif, Benyass
AU - Appiah, Lambert T.
AU - Gamra, Habib
AU - Mboup, Mouhamed Cherif
AU - Nedjar, Redouane
AU - N'Guetta, Roland
AU - Jeilan, Mohamed
AU - Ogah, Okechukwu S.
AU - Pinto, Fausto
AU - Raissouni, Zainab
AU - Rosano, Giuseppe M.C.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. All rights reserved.
PY - 2025/4/1
Y1 - 2025/4/1
N2 - African populations have traditionally been considered at relatively low risk of cardiovascular diseases (CVD), such as chronic coronary syndrome (CCS), but this is rapidly changing in association with ageing populations, uncontrolled urbanization and lack of control of classical CV risk factors. In sub-Saharan Africa, CVD deaths have increased by more than 50% in the past three decades. For CCS care, limited availability of clinical expertise, diagnostic facilities, and access to optimal medical therapy (OMT), lack or inadequate reimbursement of healthcare costs, and scarcity of universal health coverage (UHC) are major challenges. Cardiologists from 11 African countries, meeting through the AFEX: ACT ON Angina programme, with the endorsement of the World Heart Federation, identified the need to: engage clinicians, patients, and the media to raise awareness of CCS and angina, and encourage lifestyle modification and risk factor control, as well as early referral of high-risk individuals; develop care pathways to address growing demand, including cross-border and online collaboration where local expertise is unavailable; optimize the use of treatment budgets by adapting and implementing international guidelines according to local priorities, and avoiding prescription of nonevidence-based medicines; initiate collaborative research into the nature of CCS in African countries and potential differences in risk factors, presentation, and treatment response compared with Europe and North America whose experience forms the basis of international guidelines. A roadmap is proposed to guide future developments in CCS care and support best practices across Africa.
AB - African populations have traditionally been considered at relatively low risk of cardiovascular diseases (CVD), such as chronic coronary syndrome (CCS), but this is rapidly changing in association with ageing populations, uncontrolled urbanization and lack of control of classical CV risk factors. In sub-Saharan Africa, CVD deaths have increased by more than 50% in the past three decades. For CCS care, limited availability of clinical expertise, diagnostic facilities, and access to optimal medical therapy (OMT), lack or inadequate reimbursement of healthcare costs, and scarcity of universal health coverage (UHC) are major challenges. Cardiologists from 11 African countries, meeting through the AFEX: ACT ON Angina programme, with the endorsement of the World Heart Federation, identified the need to: engage clinicians, patients, and the media to raise awareness of CCS and angina, and encourage lifestyle modification and risk factor control, as well as early referral of high-risk individuals; develop care pathways to address growing demand, including cross-border and online collaboration where local expertise is unavailable; optimize the use of treatment budgets by adapting and implementing international guidelines according to local priorities, and avoiding prescription of nonevidence-based medicines; initiate collaborative research into the nature of CCS in African countries and potential differences in risk factors, presentation, and treatment response compared with Europe and North America whose experience forms the basis of international guidelines. A roadmap is proposed to guide future developments in CCS care and support best practices across Africa.
KW - Africa
KW - angina
KW - chronic coronary syndrome
KW - optimal medical therapy
KW - roadmap
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105000000016
U2 - 10.2459/JCM.0000000000001707
DO - 10.2459/JCM.0000000000001707
M3 - Article
C2 - 40053461
AN - SCOPUS:105000000016
SN - 1558-2027
VL - 26
SP - 172
EP - 181
JO - Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine
JF - Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine
IS - 4
ER -