Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to compare implementation of a Decision Support System (DSS) - aligned to the 2019 ESC/EAS Guidelines - in addition to routine clinical care versus routine clinical care without availability of a DSS, in participants aged ≥18 to < 80 years old presenting with Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS). The main questions it aims to answer are: - to assess whether the availability of a DSS (which provides estimates of risk and estimates of potential benefit through LDL-C lowering) to current practice results in an increase in the early initiation of combination Lipid Lowering Therapies (LLTs) or intensification of LLT regimens compared to current practice alone over a 24-week period after an Acute Coronary Syndromes (ACS) event - To estimate in the study cohort the potential benefits of guideline-based LLT intensification via simulation-based methods using estimates of baseline risk: LLT utilisation, additional LDL-C reductions and LDL-C goal achievement, on simulated risk of CV events through modelling. Participants will give consent to randomised clinical sites to collect their data. The clinical sites will either be randomised to standard of care or the availability of and access to the DSS. Researchers will compare patients from DSS and Non-DSS sites to see if the availability of the DSS results in implementation of more intensive lipid lowering regimens, resulting in the achievement of lower LDL-C values as well as the proportion of patients who reach target LDL-C levels (<1.4 mmol/L (<55 mg/dL) by Week 24.


Clinical Trial Description

Patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS) including myocardial infarction (MI) remain at risk of future cardiovascular events depending upon the interaction between inherited genetic factors/ and environmental factors including cholesterol over their lifetime. Expert guidelines on secondary prevention such as the ESC therefore increasingly recognise a more individualised approach. Lowering LDL-C with high intensity lipid lowering therapies (LLTs) initiated within 10 days of an ACS reduces risk more than less intense regimens. In the SWEDEHEART registry which included 40,6007 patients over a median follow up of 3.78 years, patients who achieved the largest absolute reductions in LDL-C or greatest percentage reduction in LDL-C, had the lowest risk of a range of cardiovascular events and mortality. The approach to use of lipid lowering (LLT) was statin based monotherapy with few attaining the recommended cholesterol goals. The 2019 European Society of Cardiology (ESC) and European Atherosclerosis Society (EAS) dyslipidaemia guidelines categorise patients with an ACS event as very-high risk and recommend an LDL-C goal of < 1.4 mmol/L (<55 mg/dL) and >50% reduction in LDL-C in this population. But several studies in European populations have highlighted gaps between clinical practice/ implementation of treatment recommendations compared with evidence based guideline recommendations. In the DA VINCI study representing 5,888 patients prescribed LLT in 18 European countries, LDL-C goal achievement in very-high risk populations was just 39% per 2016 ESC/EAS guidelines of<1.8mmol/L with only about 18% achieving the new recommended lower goal of <1.4mmol/L. It has become clear that greater implementation/ use of available combination therapies will be needed if lower recommended goals are to be achieved. It is unclear what the barriers are to earlier implementation and may include a lack of physician understanding of risk of further CV events or a lack of understanding of the quantifiable benefits from specific magnitudes of LDL-C lowering. The aim of this trial is to assess whether providing information to those managing ACS patients that quantify absolute risk and the absolute benefit from different lipid lowering regimens through access to a Decision Support Tool (DSS) system is more likely to result in earlier intensification of lipid lowering regimens and thus result in a greater proportion of patients achieving the ESC lipid lowering goals after ACS compared to patients being managed routinely without access to a DSS standard (cluster RCT design). It is well established that unless treatments are initiated through secondary care or as part of acute care pathways, there is considerable inertia in further optimisation of treatment in primary care. Thus, this trial will assess whether presenting quantifiable data on risks and benefits results in behaviour change among secondary care physicians and improves cholesterol management within 6 months of an ACS. The DSS is available online or remotely accessible via a website intended for clinicians to estimate the clinical benefit of any LLT regimen, whether single or combination therapies. The DSS shows the expected risk, risk reductions and number needed to treat for the various treatments selected by the clinical user on the potential value of initiation of an add-on therapy for reducing the risk of other Cardiovascular (CV) events. This DSS provides a graphical and tabular representation of the time-dependent CV treatment benefit model for LLTs published in a peer-reviewed journal article. The trial hypothesises that having a pictorial representation of both individual risk and recommended treatments will encourage clinicians to implement clinical guidelines more closely. The clinicians using the DSS will be asked to complete a DSS evaluation at the end of the trial. Implementing the patient-specific recommendation remains at the clinicians' discretion. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05844566
Study type Interventional
Source Imperial College London
Contact Maria Moreno Morales
Phone +44 (0) 7935 352902
Email m.moreno-morales@imperial.ac.uk
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date April 3, 2023
Completion date March 31, 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT06013813 - Conventional vs. Distal Radial Access Outcomes in STEMI Patients Treated by PCI N/A
Completed NCT04507529 - Peer-mentor Support for Older Vulnerable Myocardial Infarction Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT06066970 - Cardiac Biomarkers for the Quantification of Myocardial Damage After Cardiac Surgery
Recruiting NCT03620266 - Effects of Bilberry and Oat Intake After Type 2 Diabetes and/or MI N/A
Completed NCT04097912 - Study to Gather Information to What Extent Patients Follow the Treatment Regimen of Low-dose Aspirin for Primary and Secondary Prevention of Diseases of the Heart and Blood Vessels
Completed NCT04153006 - Comparison of Fingerstick Versus Venous Sample for Troponin I.
Completed NCT03668587 - Feasibility and Security of a Rapid Rule-out and rule-in Troponin Protocol in the Management of NSTEMI in an Emergency Departement
Recruiting NCT01218776 - International Survey of Acute Coronary Syndromes in Transitional Countries
Completed NCT03076801 - Does Choral Singing Help imprOve Stress in Patients With Ischemic HeaRt Disease? N/A
Recruiting NCT05371470 - Voice Analysis Technology to Detect and Manage Depression and Anxiety in Cardiac Rehabilitation N/A
Recruiting NCT04562272 - Attenuation of Post-infarct LV Remodeling by Mechanical Unloading Using Impella-CP N/A
Completed NCT04584645 - A Digital Flu Intervention for People With Cardiovascular Conditions N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04475380 - Complex All-comers and Patients With Diabetes or Prediabetes, Treated With Xience Sierra Everolimus-eluting Stents
Not yet recruiting NCT06007950 - Time-restricted Eating Study (TRES): Impacts on Anthropometric, Cardiometabolic and Cardiovascular Health N/A
Withdrawn NCT05327855 - Efficacy and Safety of OPL-0301 Compared to Placebo in Adults With Post-Myocardial Infarction (MI) Phase 2
Recruiting NCT02876952 - High Intensity Aerobic Interval Training With Mediterranean Diet Recommendations in Post-Myocardial Infarct Patients N/A
Completed NCT02917213 - Imaging Silent Brain Infarct And Thrombosis in Acute Myocardial Infarction
Completed NCT02711631 - Feasibility and Effectiveness of Remote Virtual Reality-Based Cardiac Rehabilitation N/A
Completed NCT02552407 - Thrombectomy in ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction, an Individual Patient Meta-analysis N/A
Completed NCT02382731 - Interventions to Support Long-Term Adherence aNd Decrease Cardiovascular Events Post-Myocardial Infarction N/A