Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03853213 |
Other study ID # |
AAAR9458 |
Secondary ID |
R21HL145970-01 |
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
March 28, 2019 |
Est. completion date |
July 31, 2020 |
Study information
Verified date |
August 2021 |
Source |
Columbia University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The primary goal of this project is to identify, measure, and influence fear of cardiac event
recurrence, a candidate mechanism of change in medication adherence in patients with
suspected acute coronary syndrome (ACS). An intervention will be tested that has been used to
reduce fear of cancer recurrence by changing emotion-related patterns of attention allocation
and interpretation of neutral stimuli. Secondarily, the study will test whether a reduction
in fear of cardiac event recurrence improves medication adherence.
Description:
Acute coronary syndrome (ACS; myocardial infarction or unstable angina) is a leading cause of
morbidity and mortality in the U.S., with >1 million cases per year. Survivors are at high
risk for recurrent cardiovascular disease (CVD) events, particularly if they do not adhere to
risk-reducing medications. Unfortunately, nonadherence among ACS patients is very common
(~50%), and no effective, scalable interventions exist. Addressing medication nonadherence in
ACS patients requires an experimental medicine approach to identify specific mechanisms of
behavior change in populations for whom those mechanisms are most relevant and modifiable.
Accumulating evidence suggests that the many patients who develop post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) symptoms following ACS view their medications as reminders of their cardiac
event and their future CVD risk. Ironically, although it has rarely been studied outside of
cancer survivors, this fear of recurrence (FoR) may undermine medication adherence in ACS
patients. This project will use the Science of Behavior Change (SOBC) experimental medicine
approach to investigate FoR as a putative mechanism of behavior change with respect to heart
medication adherence among ACS patients with early PTSD symptoms at hospital discharge. The
study will test a cognitive-affective intervention that has been shown to reduce FoR in
cancer survivors, that is delivered electronically (electronic tablet) in the patient's home.
The intervention has been adapted in this study for ACS to be tested using a double-blind
randomized controlled design. One hundred suspected ACS patients will be enrolled who
reported at least mild to moderate threat perceptions at the time of their initial visit to
the emergency department. FoR and future time perspective will be assessed within six weeks
of the initial visit to the emergency department, and then participants will be trained on
the tablet intervention. Participants will complete the intervention over four weeks in eight
half-hour sessions, twice each week. Medication adherence will be measured electronically
using eCAP devices. FoR and future time perspective will be reassessed 1 month after the
baseline session, and cognitive-affective change will be assessed electronically throughout
the intervention period.
In addition to investigating FoR as the primary mechanism of behavior change, the study also
investigates a secondary potential mechanism that is a distinct, but related, construct:
future time perspective. Furthermore, in addition to examining medication adherence as the
primary health behavior of interest, the study also examines a secondary health behavior that
is reduced in fearful cardiac patients: physical activity. Collectively, the three aims below
address these two putative mechanisms (FoR, future time perspective) and these two health
behaviors (medication adherence, physical activity) in the randomly assigned groups
(intervention, control).
Objectives
Aim 1 (main purpose of the trial):
The study will determine whether a tablet-based cognitive bias modification treatment (CBMT)
intervention influences the two putative mechanisms of fear of recurrence (FoR) and future
time perspective. Of primary importance within this first aim, it will test whether the
intervention reduces cardiac-related FoR relative to control. The trial is statistically
powered to test the first aim as it relates to FoR. Secondarily, it will also test whether
the intervention increases an expansive future time perspective relative to control.
Aim 2 (exploratory):
The study will determine the extent to which the two potential mechanisms of behavior
change-FoR and future time perspective-are each associated with health behaviors. Of primary
importance within this second aim, it will test associations between these two potential
mechanisms of behavior change and objectively measured and self-reported adherence to heart
medications (antiplatelets to reduce risk of blood clotting, antihypertensive drugs to reduce
blood pressure, or statins to lower cholesterol). Of secondary importance, it will test
whether these two potential mechanisms of behavior change are associated with self-reported
physical activity.
Aim 3 (exploratory):
The study will test whether the intervention improves the two health behaviors of interest.
Of primary importance within this third aim, it will test whether the intervention relative
to control is associated with higher heart medication adherence (objectively measured or
self-reported) in the two months after the baseline visit and whether any such beneficial
effects are mediated by reductions in the putative mechanisms of FoR or future time
perspective. Secondarily, it will test whether the intervention relative to control is
associated with greater increases in self-reported physical activity in the two months after
the baseline visit and whether any such beneficial effects are mediated by reductions in the
putative mechanisms of FoR or future time perspective.