Background: We sought to determine whether there is an association between the rate of prescription of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and the rate of hospitalization for heart failure.
Methods and results: We conducted a cross-sectional study linking prescribing data with hospital admission data from 215 primary health care practices in Greater Glasgow, United Kingdom. We obtained numbers of prescriptions of diuretics. ACE inhibitors, and digoxin and numbers of admissions for heart failure. The mean practice rate of diuretic prescription was 0.7 per patient per year, the mean practice rate of ACE inhibitor prescription was 0.06 per patient per year, the mean practice rate of digoxin prescription was 0.09 per patient per year, and the mean practice rate of admission for heart failure was 3.29 per 1,000 patients per year. There was a strong and significant association between the rate of diuretic prescription and the rate of digoxin prescription. There was only a moderate inverse association between the ratio of ACE inhibitor to diuretic prescriptions and the rate of admissions for heart failure.
Conclusions: ACE inhibitors are underused. Rates of diuretic and digoxin prescriptions correlate strongly and are presumably both markers for similar cardiovascular morbidity. There was no evidence that ACE inhibitors modulated the rate of heart failure admissions.