Myocardial Infarction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Culturally-Tailored Hospital-based Model to Improve Statin Use and Outcomes in Patients With Coronary Disease
Our research aims to improve the use of medicines known to prevent recurrent heart attacks.
In particular, we know that statin treatment is useful after heart attacks, but many
patients do not use it. There are a few possible reasons for this. Patients cannot find
affordable medicine. Their doctor may not prescribe the medicine after they leave the
hospital. Some people may culturally mistrust using the medicine. So they may decide not to
take it even if it is prescribed. We are developing a hospital based culturally attuned
program to target this problem. In this program, a community health worker counsels and
helps patients in accessing pharmacy assistance programs. We will test whether this program
can improve appropriate statin use.
We will enroll patients who have heart attacks. We will compare patients who are counseled
by the community health worker with those who get the usual care at baseline and at 6 and 12
months (participants enrolled during the early phase of the recruitment will have an
additional study visit at 24 months). We will test if their "bad" cholesterol levels are
controlled. We will find out how regularly they have filled their questionnaire and taken
the medicine. Finally, we will test if they are getting benefit from the statin treatment.
We will do this using blood tests and imaging the patients' arteries with ultrasound. We
will also measure how cost-effective it is for a hospital to run the program.
It is our goal to develop a community health worker model that is culturally sensitive for
people with cultural, educational or educational barriers. Statin use is known to benefit
patients in theory; such a culturally competent program will improve health outcomes in
practice. After we test it, a cost-effective program such as this can be implemented in
other hospitals.
The lipid-specific and pleiotropic benefits of statin therapy, and secondary prevention of
coronary artery disease (CAD) mortality have been demonstrated. Statin therapy in particular
is underutilized in both white and Black American populations who have CAD and who do not
have access to therapy or who cannot afford it. Systems factors related to these findings
involve a lack of continuous access to medications following hospital discharge for many
Black Americans and for white Americans who do not have the ability to readily afford their
medicines or who do not have the educational background to understand the importance of
therapy. In many cases, there is failure by primary care physicians to continue statin
therapy after discharge in patients who have poor access to therapy or who do not comply
with pharmacotherapy. Patient factors include mistrust and volitional nonadherence related
to beliefs and personal priorities, and a lack of education and support related to
preventive therapy.
This trial will thus take place in lower income and lower educational level Black and white
American patients identified at the time of hospitalization and will continue for two years
after a myocardial infarction, coronary artery bypass graft, or percutaneous intervention.
The overall hypothesis is that a quality of care intervention delivered to Black and white
American patients with lower incomes and /or education by a culturally competent community
health worker (CHW) within an existing hospital system will result in improved outcomes. The
CHW will counsel patients and help them access resources, including Maryland and private
pharmacy assistance programs. The specific aims are to compare the impact of a
hospital-based CHW intervention versus usual care (UC) on (1) the percent who achieve LDL
cholesterol goals, (2) adherence to the statin regimen, and (3) health outcomes including
inflammatory markers and vascular function at 6 and 12 months after hospitalization for the
premature CAD event. (Participants enrolled during the early phase of the recruitment will
have an additional study visit at 24 months.) We will determine the cost of achieving the
LDL-C goal in each group. Outcome measures include patient adherence (pill counts, modified
Hill-Bone questionnaire), lipid parameters, hs-CRP, and brachial artery reactivity as a
marker of endothelial function.
Intention to treat analyses will be used. Multivariable adjusted analysis using generalized
linear models or generalized estimating equations will be used to determine the independent
effect of the interventions after adjusting for covariates. A sample size of 68 subjects per
group can detect hypothesized differences in the proportion of participants meeting goal
levels of LDL-C with 92% power, as the primary outcome at 1 years. This proposal will
demonstrate the effectiveness of a potentially generalizable model of culturally competent
care that will improve the use of statin therapy and its health outcomes in Black and white
Americans with documented CAD and poor access to statin pharmacotherapy.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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