Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
Quality of Life Post-ACS in Participants From EMMACE
EMMACE-XL will recruit participants who are survivors of acute coronary syndrome (a type of heart attack) to assess their health-related quality of life five years or more after their heart attack. We will invite surviving participants from the EMMACE 3 and 4 studies to consent to participate in EMMACE-XL study, they will be asked to complete one questionnaire relating to their health, medication and lifestyle. The questionnaire will be linked to their data collected as part of the EMMACE 3 and 4 studies including long term follow up data from NHS Digital. The data collected from all the studies will then be analysed to see if patient groups can be identified who are at risk of poorer quality of life and worse health outcomes. These groups can then be targeted with the aim of improving their health outcomes. The study will use statistical methods to look at the relationship of factors such asÍž medication adherence, comorbidities and patient demographics on health-related quality of life and health outcomes.
Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) after myocardial infarction (MI) is an important clinical outcome. It allows the definition of health outcomes from a patient's perspective and, therefore, offers the potential to collect patient-centered ill-health, which may be used as an additional endpoint in the evaluation of care. Many survivors of MI experience poor HRQoL, and many patients consider the quality of additional life years gained just as important as the length of life. The goal of contemporary therapies, therefore, should be not only to extend life expectancy, but also to ensure a high quality long-term health state. Accordingly, HRQoL is increasingly being used as an outcome measure in clinical trials evaluating both the impact of disease burden and the effectiveness of cardiovascular interventions. Research has shown that changes in HRQoL are associated with a range of clinical outcomes, including death, anxiety and depression, and medications compliance. Changes in HRQoL have been reported to negatively impact healthcare costs, and employment. However, there is a paucity of information about the relationship between HRQoL and clinical outcomes inherent following MI. Moreover, previous research is limited by small sample sizes, poor generalisability,selection bias, the use of retrospective cross-sectional designs,and short follow-up durations of 6 months - 2 years. For example in our previous studies (EMMACE 3 and 4 ), we followed up patients for up to 2 years. The EMMACE data analysis showed that over two years HRQoL improved for the majority (two thirds) but was significantly worse and more likely to decline for women, NSTEMI, and people with long-term health conditions . Whilst the analysis of EMMACE demonstrates promising results, the EMMACE data are limited by the short follow up period of up to 2 years. We have been funded by the British Heart Foundation (Program grant number PG/19/54/34511) to link the EMMACE 3 and 4 data to ONS (mortality) and Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) data such that longer-term non-fatal and fatal outcomes and healthcare utilisation may be studied. All patients were consented to enter the EMMACE 3 and 4 studies and for their self-reported data to be linked to future electronic health record data. EMMACE data has already been successfully linked to data from the national heart attack registry (Myocardial Ischemia National Audit project, MINAP) thus providing information about hospital treatment for MI and comorbidities. This study will provide a further follow up of this data so that longer term follow up can be studied. To complement our work, and given the paucity on longer term HRQoL data, in this proposal we aim to collect > 5 years HRQoL measures data from the participants of EMMACE 3 & 4 studies. The longer follow up of HRQoL data (> 5 years) may provide insights into understanding the association between long term changes in HRQoL and subsequent clinical outcomes and precisely in whom worse (or better) outcomes may occur will permit the design and testing of novel intervention to reduce premature death from MI. The planned research will provide unique and comprehensive insight into the relationship between changes in HRQoL and survival following MI. Health-related quality of life is a patient reported outcome measure (PROM) which can detect change in risk of events for patients, and potentially serve as a predictor of future risk (using patient-facing data capture tools). Understanding the association between changes in HRQoL and health outcomes and precisely in whom worse (or better) outcomes may occur will permit the design and testing of novel interventions to reduce premature death from MI. ;
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