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Wikipedia

Polypill

A polypill is a type of drug combination consisting of a single drug product in pill form (i.e., tablet or capsule) and thus combines multiple medications (that is, more than one active pharmaceutical ingredient). The prefix "poly" means "multiple", referring to the multiplicity of distinct drugs in a given "pill". In precise usage, a pill is a polypill if it contains at least 4 drugs (meaning that fixed-dose combinations of 2 or 3 drugs are not polypills). An occasional synonym is combopill. A polypill is commonly targets treatment or prevention of chronic conditions.[1]

Polypills may be aimed to be consumed by healthy people as a means of preventive medicine, and/or treating actual pathophysiological condition(s), the former typically involving lower dosages than the latter. Polypills can reduce the number of tablets or capsules (generally orally administered) that need to be taken, which in turn may facilitate handling and administration of pharmaceuticals as well as alleviate patient pill-burden. Sometimes the multiple drugs in a given polypill might all be aimed at a single underlying condition (or, group of related conditions), partly because this expands the pool of potential patients for whom a given combination of drugs/dosages might be appropriate (particularly in the case of mass-produced polypills, i.e. FDCs). The term polypill was first coined in the context of cardiovascular disease prevention,[2][3] but has since gained broader acceptance, including now for combinatorial drug products that existed before the term was actually coined (as the bare term without any modifiers is now quite generic).

In addition to the noted fixed-dose types of polypills, polypills can also be custom-made for specific patients through a process called pharmacy compounding. Physicians in most jurisdictions have wide discretion to prescribe customized drug products containing unique drug-dosage combinations (and/or formulations thereof) specifically for individual patients, which certain pharmacies can then sometimes produce for such patients.

For treatment or management of disease

Polypills are a useful therapeutic tool for those afflicted with various diseases/conditions, by consolidating multiple medications into a single product and thereby simplifying medication administration for healthcare personnel as well as alleviating pill-burden for patients.

HIV, mental-health, transplant, and certain other patient groups are known for especially high pill-burdens (whether temporary or indefinite). Also, elderly patients in particular are likely to require several medications on a daily basis for managing multiple conditions, and they are also particularly susceptible to difficulties remembering or keeping track of their regimen.

Origin of multi-drug pill usage

Combinatorial drug products were proposed for treating diagnosed conditions long before they were proposed for preventive medicine, including "aspolol" (a combination of aspirin and atenolol) for those diagnosed with cardiovascular disease. Fixed-dose combination (FDC) products today are also common for treating other diseases, such as tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS.

Developments in polypill usage for disease therapy

Treating cardiovascular disease

One of the first recommended roles of a polypill was as a means of providing recommended medications to people with heart disease, stroke and other forms of cardiovascular disease. Most cardiovascular disease patients do not receive recommended medications long-term: the proportion of cardiovascular disease patients not receiving a statin, aspirin and blood pressure lowering medication long-term ranges from about 50% in high income countries to over 90% in low income countries.[4] In 2001, a World Health Organisation and The Wellcome Trust meeting of experts to discuss interventions for non-communicable diseases noted “the use of a single pill could well encourage patients to adhere to treatment as well as seriously reduce the cost of the drugs”[5] A programme of research was outlined, including stability and bio-availability testing followed by assessment of short-term effects on blood pressure, cholesterol, platelet aggregation, safety and side effects. In 2002, the World Health Organisation Annual Report outlined the substantial potential public health impact and cost-effectiveness of scaling up access to combination cardiovascular treatment[6] and an editorial in The Lancet noted that a four component combination pill would reduce cardiovascular risk by about 75% among people with vascular disease.[7]

Treating diabetes and metabolic syndrome

Polypills have been proposed for managing diabetes (and potentially for pre-diabetes).[8]

Diabetes - particularly Type II diabetes - is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Diabetes also contributes substantially to cardiovascular risk, yet some ingredients appropriate for a cardiovascular polypill may not be advisable for patients with diabetes (such as beta-blockers and thiazide diuretics). A polypill for diabetes could include a statin (to reduce LDL cholesterol and for their anti-inflammatory properties), an ACE inhibitor (for blood pressure control and to protect the kidneys), aspirin (for antiplatelet and anti-inflammatory properties), and metformin (a medication for diabetes that is also associated with weight loss).

Role of compounding pharmacy

As noted, not all polypills are mass-produced fixed-dose (FDC) drug products. Physicians in many countries have wide discretion to prescribe customized drug products containing unique drug-dosage combinations and/or formulations thereof specifically for individual patients, which can then be custom-produced in a compounding pharmacy. Some kinds or compositions of polypills or similar drug products are more amenable to custom-compounding than others, and most retail pharmacies no longer offer compounding services at all (although hospital pharmacies still commonly compound intravenous medications). While fewer pharmacists are trained and experienced in the relevant skills anymore, especially regarding oral dosage forms, such compounding pharmacies nevertheless can be found and utilized via mail-order (if not available locally) with sufficient notice and planning. Generally, if a customized drug product is produced for a specific patient in response to a prescription specifying said patient's drug(s)/dosage(s), it is not subject to regulatory approval (e.g., FDA in the US) but is instead regulated under the practice of pharmacy (governed at the state-level in the US).

Technologies are under development to facilitate production of customized polypills, such as for example by the use of ink-jet printing mechanisms to precisely deposit selected drug substance(s) onto sheets which can then be inserted into capsules (enabling "individualized dosing and automated fabrication of medicines containing multiple drugs," in addition to custom single-drug products).[9][10][11] Similar technology can also be used to print tablets, more directly. Ink-jet or fluid-jet approaches require each drug substance to be dissolved in a liquid solvent, but they can be particularly conducive to custom formulation with various possible excipients (in addition to custom drug/dose selections).

For preventive medicine

Origin of preventive medicine applications

Wald and Law had first proposed using a combination of well-known and inexpensive medications in one pill for protection against cardiovascular disease.[3] They presented a statistical model which suggested widespread use of such a polypill could reduce mortality due to heart disease and strokes by up to 80%, while the drugs and their respective interactions are already fairly well known and understood due to many years of being prescribed together (via separate pills). They proposed combining six medications already established in treating cardiovascular disease and associated conditions, providing these in a single pill to people in Western countries aged 55 years or more as a preventive measure (albeit in lower doses than when used for treatment).[3]

Developments of preventive medicine applications

Any physician could currently prescribe all the components of many proposed polypills separately for their patients, whether therapeutically or preventively. And since the ingredients of many possible polypills are off patent, it can be cheap to commercialize, although FDC products with novel combinations or formulations can sometimes themselves be patented. Of course, for any FDC product, the potential market for a given combination of drugs/dosages would need to be sufficiently large to justify the clinical trials and other expenses associated with mass-producing a new drug.

Producing countries

The polypill, drugs to lower blood pressure, is produced[12][13] in Iran by the support of Execution of Imam Khomeini's Order was designed 14 years ag and called "PolyIran". According to the study was conducted by doctors from Tehran University, the University of Birmingham in Britain and other institutions and published by The Lancet, it worked quite well in a new study, slashing the rate of heart attacks by more than half among those who regularly took the pills. The pill in the study, which involved the participation of 6,800 rural villagers aged 50 to 75 in Iran, contained a cholesterol-lowering statin, two blood-pressure drugs and a low-dose aspirin.[14][15]

Certain "cardiovascular polypills" are currently available in India and have been extensively studied there (see Polycap and PolyIran, for examples). Also, cardiologists in Spain are developing a polypill for secondary cardiovascular prevention.[16]

Preventive use rationale: Treatment of population risk

Some preventive-use advocates propose that everyone over a given age (e.g., 55) should take such medications for preventive health, irrespective of individual risk factor levels. The idea is that most people in western countries are at high overall risk, thus lowering risk factor levels will provide broad benefit. This approach emphasizes the perspective that risk factors are continuous, and rigid dichotomies such as "hypertension" and "no hypertension" may be over-simplified and can be viewed instead as continuums of inter-connected factors.[17]

In this paradigm, doctors would in effect be treating population risk rather than individual risk factor thresholds as is current mainstream practice. So, if everyone were given a relevant kind of polypill, the average blood pressure and cholesterol levels in the population would fall, thus reducing overall population risk. Perhaps ironically, this is in a sense going in the opposite direction from personalized medicine, since mass-produced or fixed-dose-combination polypills are in some tension with the goals of personalized medicine, due to the "fixed" nature of the "dose combinations." Proponents of this population-focused approach contend that the advantages of drug consolidation can outweigh any reduction in personalization of drug and/or dose selection. Also, depending on the demographic distribution and market size, there may be room for some different alternative versions of certain general FDCs to be manufactured with differences in their respective dosages and/or drugs. A widely distributed polypill could contain three blood pressure medications at low dose: a diuretic, such as hydrochlorothiazide, a beta-blocker such as atenolol, and an ACE inhibitor such as lisinopril; and these could be combined with a statin such as simvastatin, aspirin at a dose of 75 mg, and folic acid, which has been shown to reduce the level of homocysteine in the blood, which is another risk factor for heart disease.

References

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on November 1, 2013.
  2. ^ "Polypill".
  3. ^ a b c Wald NJ, Law MR (June 2003). "A strategy to reduce cardiovascular disease by more than 80%". BMJ. 326 (7404): 1419. doi:10.1136/bmj.326.7404.1419. PMC 162259. PMID 12829553.
  4. ^ Yusuf S; Islam S; Chow CK; Rangarajan S; Dagenais G; Diaz R; et al. (2011). "Use of secondary prevention drugs for cardiovascular disease in the community in high-income, middle-income, and low-income countries (the PURE Study): a prospective epidemiological survey". Lancet. 378 (9798): 1231–43. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(11)61215-4. PMID 21872920.
  5. ^ World Health Organization(2002) Secondary prevention of non-communicable disease in low and middleincome countries through community-based and health service interventions. World Health Organization - Wellcome Trust meeting report 1–3 August 2001, Geneva. http://www.who.int/cardiovascular_diseases/media/en/615.pdf
  6. ^ World Health Organization(2002) The World Health Report 2002. Reducing risks, promoting healthy life.;WHO, editor. Geneva: WHO.
  7. ^ Yusuf S (2002). "Two decades ofprogress in preventing vascular disease". Lancet. 360 (9326): 2–3. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(02)09358-3. PMID 12114031. S2CID 33042777.
  8. ^ Kuehn BM (July 2006). ""Polypill" could slash diabetes risks". JAMA. 296 (4): 377–80. doi:10.1001/jama.296.4.377. PMID 16868284.
  9. ^ Sandler, Niklas; Määttänen, Anni; Ihalainen, Petri; Kronberg, Leif; Meierjohann, Axel; Viitala, Tapani; Peltonen, Jouko (Aug 2011). "Inkjet printing of drug substances and use of porous substrates-towards individualized dosing". J Pharm Sci. 100 (8): 3386–95. doi:10.1002/jps.22526. PMID 21360709.
  10. ^ Elele, Ezinwa; Shen, Yueyang; Khusid, Boris (2010). "Electrodeless electrohydrodynamic printing of personalized medicines". Applied Physics Letters. 97 (23): 233501. Bibcode:2010ApPhL..97w3501E. doi:10.1063/1.3524512.
  11. ^ Elele, Ezinwa; Shen, Yueyang; Susarla, Ramana; Khusid, Boris; Keyvan, Golshid; Michniak-Kohn, Bozena (Jul 2012). "Electrodeless electrohydrodynamic drop-on-demand encapsulation of drugs into porous polymer films for fabrication of personalized dosage units". Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences. 101 (7): 2523–2533. doi:10.1002/jps.23165. PMID 22527973.
  12. ^ "بازتاب دستاورد جدید ستاد اجرایی فرمان امام در تولید دارویی برای سکته قلبی و مغزی". Isna. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  13. ^ "تولید داروی پلی پیل و کاهش 50درصدی سکته قلبی و مغزی". فارس.
  14. ^ Gallagher, James (2019-08-23). "Four-in-one pill prevents third of heart problems". BBC News. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  15. ^ McNeil Jr., Donald G. (2019-08-22). "This Daily Pill Cut Heart Attacks by Half. Why Isn't Everyone Getting It?". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
  16. ^ Sanz G, Fuster V (February 2009). "Fixed-dose combination therapy and secondary cardiovascular prevention: rationale, selection of drugs and target population". Nat Clin Pract Cardiovasc Med. 6 (2): 101–10. doi:10.1038/ncpcardio1419. PMID 19104519. S2CID 205339553.
  17. ^ Law MR, Wald NJ (June 2002). "Risk factor thresholds: their existence under scrutiny". BMJ. 324 (7353): 1570–6. doi:10.1136/bmj.324.7353.1570. PMC 1123506. PMID 12089098.

Selected publications

  • Fuster V, Sanz G (April 2007). "A polypill for secondary prevention: time to move from intellectual debate to action". Nat Clin Pract Cardiovasc Med. 4 (4): 173. doi:10.1038/ncpcardio0858. PMID 17380163.
  • Wald NJ, Law MR (June 2003). "A strategy to reduce cardiovascular disease by more than 80%". BMJ. 326 (7404): 1419. doi:10.1136/bmj.326.7404.1419. PMC 162259. PMID 12829553.
  • "Tests start on pill that could lengthen millions of lives: Tablet aims to cut heart attack and stroke risk: Four-in-one drug could be sold for just $1 a month" Sarah Boseley, health editor The Guardian, Monday September 29 2008.
  • Xavier D, Pais P, Sigamani A, Pogue J, Afzal R, Yusuf S (February 2009). "The need to test the theories behind the Polypill: rationale behind the Indian Polycap Study". Nat Clin Pract Cardiovasc Med. 6 (2): 96–7. doi:10.1038/ncpcardio1438. PMID 19104516.
  • Cannon CP (April 2009). "Can the polypill save the world from heart disease?". Lancet. 373 (9672): 1313–4. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(09)60652-8. PMID 19339044.
  • Gorman, Rachael Moeller. "The Polypill" Proto, Winter 2007

External links

    polypill, polypill, type, drug, combination, consisting, single, drug, product, pill, form, tablet, capsule, thus, combines, multiple, medications, that, more, than, active, pharmaceutical, ingredient, prefix, poly, means, multiple, referring, multiplicity, di. A polypill is a type of drug combination consisting of a single drug product in pill form i e tablet or capsule and thus combines multiple medications that is more than one active pharmaceutical ingredient The prefix poly means multiple referring to the multiplicity of distinct drugs in a given pill In precise usage a pill is a polypill if it contains at least 4 drugs meaning that fixed dose combinations of 2 or 3 drugs are not polypills An occasional synonym is combopill A polypill is commonly targets treatment or prevention of chronic conditions 1 Polypills may be aimed to be consumed by healthy people as a means of preventive medicine and or treating actual pathophysiological condition s the former typically involving lower dosages than the latter Polypills can reduce the number of tablets or capsules generally orally administered that need to be taken which in turn may facilitate handling and administration of pharmaceuticals as well as alleviate patient pill burden Sometimes the multiple drugs in a given polypill might all be aimed at a single underlying condition or group of related conditions partly because this expands the pool of potential patients for whom a given combination of drugs dosages might be appropriate particularly in the case of mass produced polypills i e FDCs The term polypill was first coined in the context of cardiovascular disease prevention 2 3 but has since gained broader acceptance including now for combinatorial drug products that existed before the term was actually coined as the bare term without any modifiers is now quite generic In addition to the noted fixed dose types of polypills polypills can also be custom made for specific patients through a process called pharmacy compounding Physicians in most jurisdictions have wide discretion to prescribe customized drug products containing unique drug dosage combinations and or formulations thereof specifically for individual patients which certain pharmacies can then sometimes produce for such patients Contents 1 For treatment or management of disease 1 1 Origin of multi drug pill usage 1 2 Developments in polypill usage for disease therapy 1 2 1 Treating cardiovascular disease 1 2 2 Treating diabetes and metabolic syndrome 1 2 3 Role of compounding pharmacy 2 For preventive medicine 2 1 Origin of preventive medicine applications 2 2 Developments of preventive medicine applications 2 3 Producing countries 2 4 Preventive use rationale Treatment of population risk 3 References 4 Selected publications 5 External linksFor treatment or management of disease EditPolypills are a useful therapeutic tool for those afflicted with various diseases conditions by consolidating multiple medications into a single product and thereby simplifying medication administration for healthcare personnel as well as alleviating pill burden for patients HIV mental health transplant and certain other patient groups are known for especially high pill burdens whether temporary or indefinite Also elderly patients in particular are likely to require several medications on a daily basis for managing multiple conditions and they are also particularly susceptible to difficulties remembering or keeping track of their regimen Origin of multi drug pill usage Edit Combinatorial drug products were proposed for treating diagnosed conditions long before they were proposed for preventive medicine including aspolol a combination of aspirin and atenolol for those diagnosed with cardiovascular disease Fixed dose combination FDC products today are also common for treating other diseases such as tuberculosis and HIV AIDS Developments in polypill usage for disease therapy Edit Treating cardiovascular disease Edit One of the first recommended roles of a polypill was as a means of providing recommended medications to people with heart disease stroke and other forms of cardiovascular disease Most cardiovascular disease patients do not receive recommended medications long term the proportion of cardiovascular disease patients notreceiving a statin aspirin and blood pressure lowering medication long term ranges from about 50 in high income countries to over 90 in low income countries 4 In 2001 a World Health Organisation and The Wellcome Trust meeting of experts to discuss interventions for non communicable diseases noted the use of a single pill could well encourage patients to adhere to treatment as well as seriously reduce the cost of the drugs 5 A programme of research was outlined including stability and bio availability testing followed by assessment of short term effects on blood pressure cholesterol platelet aggregation safety and side effects In 2002 the World Health Organisation Annual Report outlined the substantial potential public health impact and cost effectiveness of scaling up access to combination cardiovascular treatment 6 and an editorial in The Lancet noted that a four component combination pill would reduce cardiovascular risk by about 75 among people with vascular disease 7 Treating diabetes and metabolic syndrome Edit Polypills have been proposed for managing diabetes and potentially for pre diabetes 8 Diabetes particularly Type II diabetes is a major cause of morbidity and mortality Diabetes also contributes substantially to cardiovascular risk yet some ingredients appropriate for a cardiovascular polypill may not be advisable for patients with diabetes such as beta blockers and thiazide diuretics A polypill for diabetes could include a statin to reduce LDL cholesterol and for their anti inflammatory properties an ACE inhibitor for blood pressure control and to protect the kidneys aspirin for antiplatelet and anti inflammatory properties and metformin a medication for diabetes that is also associated with weight loss Role of compounding pharmacy Edit As noted not all polypills are mass produced fixed dose FDC drug products Physicians in many countries have wide discretion to prescribe customized drug products containing unique drug dosage combinations and or formulations thereof specifically for individual patients which can then be custom produced in a compounding pharmacy Some kinds or compositions of polypills or similar drug products are more amenable to custom compounding than others and most retail pharmacies no longer offer compounding services at all although hospital pharmacies still commonly compound intravenous medications While fewer pharmacists are trained and experienced in the relevant skills anymore especially regarding oral dosage forms such compounding pharmacies nevertheless can be found and utilized via mail order if not available locally with sufficient notice and planning Generally if a customized drug product is produced for a specific patient in response to a prescription specifying said patient s drug s dosage s it is not subject to regulatory approval e g FDA in the US but is instead regulated under the practice of pharmacy governed at the state level in the US Technologies are under development to facilitate production of customized polypills such as for example by the use of ink jet printing mechanisms to precisely deposit selected drug substance s onto sheets which can then be inserted into capsules enabling individualized dosing and automated fabrication of medicines containing multiple drugs in addition to custom single drug products 9 10 11 Similar technology can also be used to print tablets more directly Ink jet or fluid jet approaches require each drug substance to be dissolved in a liquid solvent but they can be particularly conducive to custom formulation with various possible excipients in addition to custom drug dose selections For preventive medicine EditOrigin of preventive medicine applications Edit Wald and Law had first proposed using a combination of well known and inexpensive medications in one pill for protection against cardiovascular disease 3 They presented a statistical model which suggested widespread use of such a polypill could reduce mortality due to heart disease and strokes by up to 80 while the drugs and their respective interactions are already fairly well known and understood due to many years of being prescribed together via separate pills They proposed combining six medications already established in treating cardiovascular disease and associated conditions providing these in a single pill to people in Western countries aged 55 years or more as a preventive measure albeit in lower doses than when used for treatment 3 Developments of preventive medicine applications Edit Any physician could currently prescribe all the components of many proposed polypills separately for their patients whether therapeutically or preventively And since the ingredients of many possible polypills are off patent it can be cheap to commercialize although FDC products with novel combinations or formulations can sometimes themselves be patented Of course for any FDC product the potential market for a given combination of drugs dosages would need to be sufficiently large to justify the clinical trials and other expenses associated with mass producing a new drug Producing countries Edit The polypill drugs to lower blood pressure is produced 12 13 in Iran by the support of Execution of Imam Khomeini s Order was designed 14 years ag and called PolyIran According to the study was conducted by doctors from Tehran University the University of Birmingham in Britain and other institutions and published by The Lancet it worked quite well in a new study slashing the rate of heart attacks by more than half among those who regularly took the pills The pill in the study which involved the participation of 6 800 rural villagers aged 50 to 75 in Iran contained a cholesterol lowering statin two blood pressure drugs and a low dose aspirin 14 15 Certain cardiovascular polypills are currently available in India and have been extensively studied there see Polycap and PolyIran for examples Also cardiologists in Spain are developing a polypill for secondary cardiovascular prevention 16 Preventive use rationale Treatment of population risk Edit Some preventive use advocates propose that everyone over a given age e g 55 should take such medications for preventive health irrespective of individual risk factor levels The idea is that most people in western countries are at high overall risk thus lowering risk factor levels will provide broad benefit This approach emphasizes the perspective that risk factors are continuous and rigid dichotomies such as hypertension and no hypertension may be over simplified and can be viewed instead as continuums of inter connected factors 17 In this paradigm doctors would in effect be treating population risk rather than individual risk factor thresholds as is current mainstream practice So if everyone were given a relevant kind of polypill the average blood pressure and cholesterol levels in the population would fall thus reducing overall population risk Perhaps ironically this is in a sense going in the opposite direction from personalized medicine since mass produced or fixed dose combination polypills are in some tension with the goals of personalized medicine due to the fixed nature of the dose combinations Proponents of this population focused approach contend that the advantages of drug consolidation can outweigh any reduction in personalization of drug and or dose selection Also depending on the demographic distribution and market size there may be room for some different alternative versions of certain general FDCs to be manufactured with differences in their respective dosages and or drugs A widely distributed polypill could contain three blood pressure medications at low dose a diuretic such as hydrochlorothiazide a beta blocker such as atenolol and an ACE inhibitor such as lisinopril and these could be combined with a statin such as simvastatin aspirin at a dose of 75 mg and folic acid which has been shown to reduce the level of homocysteine in the blood which is another risk factor for heart disease References Edit WHO Polypill holds promise for people with chronic disease Archived from the original on November 1 2013 Polypill a b c Wald NJ Law MR June 2003 A strategy to reduce cardiovascular disease by more than 80 BMJ 326 7404 1419 doi 10 1136 bmj 326 7404 1419 PMC 162259 PMID 12829553 Yusuf S Islam S Chow CK Rangarajan S Dagenais G Diaz R et al 2011 Use of secondary prevention drugs for cardiovascular disease in the community in high income middle income and low income countries the PURE Study a prospective epidemiological survey Lancet 378 9798 1231 43 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 11 61215 4 PMID 21872920 World Health Organization 2002 Secondary prevention of non communicable disease in low and middleincome countries through community based and health service interventions World Health Organization Wellcome Trust meeting report 1 3 August 2001 Geneva http www who int cardiovascular diseases media en 615 pdf World Health Organization 2002 The World Health Report 2002 Reducing risks promoting healthy life WHO editor Geneva WHO 1 Yusuf S 2002 Two decades ofprogress in preventing vascular disease Lancet 360 9326 2 3 doi 10 1016 s0140 6736 02 09358 3 PMID 12114031 S2CID 33042777 Kuehn BM July 2006 Polypill could slash diabetes risks JAMA 296 4 377 80 doi 10 1001 jama 296 4 377 PMID 16868284 Sandler Niklas Maattanen Anni Ihalainen Petri Kronberg Leif Meierjohann Axel Viitala Tapani Peltonen Jouko Aug 2011 Inkjet printing of drug substances and use of porous substrates towards individualized dosing J Pharm Sci 100 8 3386 95 doi 10 1002 jps 22526 PMID 21360709 Elele Ezinwa Shen Yueyang Khusid Boris 2010 Electrodeless electrohydrodynamic printing of personalized medicines Applied Physics Letters 97 23 233501 Bibcode 2010ApPhL 97w3501E doi 10 1063 1 3524512 Elele Ezinwa Shen Yueyang Susarla Ramana Khusid Boris Keyvan Golshid Michniak Kohn Bozena Jul 2012 Electrodeless electrohydrodynamic drop on demand encapsulation of drugs into porous polymer films for fabrication of personalized dosage units Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences 101 7 2523 2533 doi 10 1002 jps 23165 PMID 22527973 بازتاب دستاورد جدید ستاد اجرایی فرمان امام در تولید دارویی برای سکته قلبی و مغزی Isna Retrieved 23 August 2019 تولید داروی پلی پیل و کاهش 50درصدی سکته قلبی و مغزی فارس Gallagher James 2019 08 23 Four in one pill prevents third of heart problems BBC News Retrieved 23 August 2019 McNeil Jr Donald G 2019 08 22 This Daily Pill Cut Heart Attacks by Half Why Isn t Everyone Getting It The New York Times Retrieved 22 August 2019 Sanz G Fuster V February 2009 Fixed dose combination therapy and secondary cardiovascular prevention rationale selection of drugs and target population Nat Clin Pract Cardiovasc Med 6 2 101 10 doi 10 1038 ncpcardio1419 PMID 19104519 S2CID 205339553 Law MR Wald NJ June 2002 Risk factor thresholds their existence under scrutiny BMJ 324 7353 1570 6 doi 10 1136 bmj 324 7353 1570 PMC 1123506 PMID 12089098 Selected publications EditFuster V Sanz G April 2007 A polypill for secondary prevention time to move from intellectual debate to action Nat Clin Pract Cardiovasc Med 4 4 173 doi 10 1038 ncpcardio0858 PMID 17380163 Wald NJ Law MR June 2003 A strategy to reduce cardiovascular disease by more than 80 BMJ 326 7404 1419 doi 10 1136 bmj 326 7404 1419 PMC 162259 PMID 12829553 Tests start on pill that could lengthen millions of lives Tablet aims to cut heart attack and stroke risk Four in one drug could be sold for just 1 a month Sarah Boseley health editor The Guardian Monday September 29 2008 Xavier D Pais P Sigamani A Pogue J Afzal R Yusuf S February 2009 The need to test the theories behind the Polypill rationale behind the Indian Polycap Study Nat Clin Pract Cardiovasc Med 6 2 96 7 doi 10 1038 ncpcardio1438 PMID 19104516 Cannon CP April 2009 Can the polypill save the world from heart disease Lancet 373 9672 1313 4 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 09 60652 8 PMID 19339044 Gorman Rachael Moeller The Polypill Proto Winter 2007External links EditThe Polypill Proto Magazine Massachusetts General Hospital Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polypill amp oldid 1129659653, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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