Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04545489 |
Other study ID # |
IIR 19-418 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
December 1, 2020 |
Est. completion date |
March 31, 2025 |
Study information
Verified date |
October 2023 |
Source |
VA Office of Research and Development |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The VA is the largest single provider of HIV care in the US and Veterans with HIV use
significantly more healthcare services and have a 1.5-2x higher risk of atherosclerotic
cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) compared to uninfected Veterans. The goal is to improve BP
treatment for Veterans with HIV to reduce ASCVD risk. Within a RCT, the investigators
hypothesize that the VA adapted nurse-led intervention will result in a clinically
significant 6mmHg reduction in SBP over 12 months compared to those receiving enhanced
education only. The study is innovative because of the use of stakeholder-engaged design
process, multi-component nurse-led intervention, and VA Video Connect (VVC) to monitor CVD
risk factors. The project meets VA strategic priorities including: 1) greater choice for
Veterans; 2) improve timeliness of services; 3) focus more resources more efficiently
(strengthen foundational services in VA). If shown to be effective, this intervention will
have substantial impact among high-risk Veterans, potentially reducing ASCVD events by more
than a quarter.
Description:
Background: The VA is the largest provider of HIV care in the United States. The ~31,000
Veterans with HIV use significantly more healthcare and have up to 2x higher risk of
atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) compared to uninfected Veterans. The HIV
treatment cascade model includes care steps; once people obtain remission, providers should
focus on preventing ASCVD. The investigators will extend the HIV treatment cascade and focus
on reducing ASCVD risk among people with HIV. Veterans with HIV have low perceived risk for
ASCVD and uptake of guideline-based treatment for BP is low.
Significance/Impact: The proposed intervention has the potential to reduce ASCVD events in
this population by more than a quarter and meet VA strategic priorities of: 1) improve
timeliness of services; 2) focus resources more efficiently as well as address HSR&D research
priorities: 1) patient centered care, care management, and health promotion; 2) healthcare
access; 3) aging; 4) virtual care.
Innovation: The study is innovative: Cascade Model. By leveraging the HIV treatment cascade
model, the investigators will create a pathway for ASCVD risk reduction to be added into
widespread quality improvement initiatives. Stakeholder-engaged design process. The
investigators will employ stakeholder-engaged research methods to ensure the intervention
meets the needs of patients and healthcare providers. Multi-component nurse-led intervention.
While each of the components of the intervention have an evidence base, they have not been
tested together in an HIV context. Telehealth. The investigators will use VA Video Connect
(VVC) to monitor CVD risk factors.
Specific Aims: Aim 1a: Conduct qualitative interviews with Veterans and healthcare providers
to ascertain perceptions regarding HIV and CVD risk reductions to inform intervention
adaptation.
Aim 1b: Adapt the intervention to the VA HIV clinic context with key stakeholder input.
Aim 2: Evaluate the 12-month efficacy of a nurse intervention to improve systolic blood
pressure in Veterans with HIV. Hypothesis: The investigators hypothesize that the
intervention will result in a clinically significant 6mmHg reduction in SBP over 12 months
compared to those receiving [enhanced education + usual care] only. Aim 3: Conduct an
evaluation of the prevention nurse intervention. Exploratory aim: If effective, [the
investigators will conduct a budget impact analysis] and simulate 10-year cost-effectiveness
of the nurse intervention.
Methodology: The investigators will conduct qualitative interviews with care team and
Veterans to adapt the intervention in an iterative design process. The investigators will
then conduct a RCT to evaluate an intervention to reduce ASCVD risk. The study will be
conducted in 3 clinics among HIV+ Veterans (n=300) on suppressive ART with confirmed SBP >140
mmHg, stratified by clinic site and randomized 1:1 to intervention vs. education control. The
intervention will involve 4 evidence-based components based on the investigators' prior
studies and adapted to Veterans with HIV: (1) nurse-led care coordination, (2) nurse-managed
medication and adherence support (3) home BP monitoring, and (4) administered VA Video
Connect (VVC). The education control will receive enhanced education and usual care. Primary
outcome: difference in 12-month systolic BP in the intervention arm vs control. Secondary
outcome: 12-month difference in non-HDL cholesterol. The investigators will use a
mixed-methods design to evaluate fidelity, dose delivered/received, reach, recruitment, and
context of the intervention.
Implementation/Next Steps: The investigators designed the intervention with downstream
implementation in view. This includes: a fully remote delivery of the intervention to
facilitate access and widespread implementation, and guidance for selection of nurses with
education / experience levels that match those of health coaches delivering interventions
within the VA. The investigators will work with operational partners from the Office of
Connected Care and Office of HIV/AIDS care regarding implementation plans. The investigators
will disseminate a clinical program, including scripts, and description of all intervention
processes, to facilitate implementation within the VA.