A Survey of Availability and Affordability of Polypills for Cardiovascular Disease in Selected Countries

Gautam Satheesh, Amitava Banerjee, Bishal Gyawali, Pablo Perel, Marie France Chan Sun, Adrianna Murphy, Mark D. Huffman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: The recent inclusion of polypills—fixed-dose combinations of antihypertensive medicines and a statin with or without aspirin—in the World Health Organization’s Essential Medicines List (EML) reiterates the potential of this approach to improve global treatment coverage for cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). Although there exists extensive evidence on the effectiveness, safety and acceptability of polypills, there has been no research to date assessing the real-world availability and affordability of polypills globally. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional survey, based on the WHO/Health Action International methodology, in 13 countries around the world. In the surveyed countries, we first ascertained whether any polypill was authorised for marketing and/or included in EMLs and clinical guidelines. In each country, we collected retail and price data for polypills from at least one public-sector facility and three private pharmacies using convenience sampling. Polypills were considered unaffordable if the lowest-paid worker spent more than a day’s wage to purchase a monthly supply. Results: Polypills were approved for marketing in four of the 13 surveyed countries: Spain, India, Mauritius and Argentina. None of these countries included polypills in national guidelines, formularies, or EMLs. In the four countries, no surveyed public pharmacies stocked polypills. In the private sector, we identified seven unique polypill combinations, marketed by eight different companies. Private sector availability was 100% in Argentina and Spain. Most combinations (n = 5) identified were in India. Combinations found in India and Spain were affordable in the local context. A lowest-paid government worker would spend between 0.2 (India) and 2.8 (Mauritius) days’ wages to pay the price for one month’s supply of the polypills. Polypills were likely to be affordable if they were manufactured in the same country. Conclusion: Low availability and affordability of polypills in the public sector suggest that implementation remains poor globally. Context-specific multi-disciplinary health system research is required to understand factors affecting polypill implementation and to design and evaluate appropriate implementation strategies.

Original languageEnglish
Article number56
JournalGlobal Heart
Volume19
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Access
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Essential Medicines
  • Polypill
  • Secondary Prevention

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