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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01245686
Other study ID # 10-2028
Secondary ID 1U48DP002658
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received November 19, 2010
Last updated February 5, 2013
Start date February 2011
Est. completion date November 2012

Study information

Verified date February 2013
Source University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority United States: Institutional Review BoardUnited States: Federal Government
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Cardiovascular disease (CVD), including heart disease and stroke, is the leading cause of death in the US. Every year, more than one million Americans have a heart attack, and nearly 800,000 have a stroke. In 2010, heart disease alone is expected to cost the country more than $316 billion in health care and lost productivity.

Both lifestyle changes and medication can reduce the risk of CVD, and this project combines these approaches in the hopes of identifying a practical intervention for use in primary care medical offices. The project combines two previously tested interventions and updates them to meet current guidelines for diet and use of aspirin and cholesterol-controlling drugs (statins).

The research team is delivering the combined intervention in two formats: web-based and counselor-based. Each format has the same content, but the web-based advice is accessed through the Internet by clients at home, a community site, or a primary care office. The other format involves sessions delivered to clients by a counselor either in person at a primary care office or over the telephone. The researchers will compare how effective each format is in reducing participants' risk of coronary heart disease. They will also determine the interventions' effect on participants' diet, physical activity, smoking status, medication adherence, and other health indicators. In addition, the team will compare the two formats' cost-effectiveness and how well the patients, office staff, and clinicians accept the interventions.

Recruited from five family practices, 600 patients representing the geographic and ethnic diversity of North Carolina are taking part in this study. Half the participants are randomly assigned to the web-based intervention; the other half to the counselor-based version. Both groups will also get information on local resources, such as gyms and farmers markets, that can help participants maintain a healthy lifestyle.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 489
Est. completion date November 2012
Est. primary completion date July 2012
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender Both
Age group 35 Years to 79 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Established patients

- Men ages 35-79

- Women ages 45-79

- History of CVD (100 participants)

- CHD risk equal or greater than 10%

- elevated CHD risk factor

Exclusion Criteria:

- non-English speaking

- no phone

- treatment of psychosis

- history of alcohol/substance abuse within last 2 years

- pregnancy, breast feeding, or anticipated pregnancy in next 18 months

- history of malignancy, other than non-melanoma skin cancer, that has not been in remission or cured surgically for >5 years

- recent history (in past year) of hypoglycemic event requiring medical attention

- estimated creatinine clearance less than 30 ml/min

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention


Intervention

Behavioral:
Lifestyle and medication intervention
The Heart to Health Intervention combines and enhances two previously tested interventions to reduce CVD risk (a counselor-based intervention to improve lifestyle and a web-based intervention to improve medication adherence). The new lifestyle and medication adherence intervention (delivered alternately in a one-on-one counseling or web-format) includes a decision aid on heart disease risk and risk-reducing options, general education on lifestyle and medication adherence, tips for overcoming barriers to CHD risk reduction, and goal setting and specification of first steps.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Durham Family Practice Durham North Carolina
United States Dayspring Family Medicine Eden North Carolina
United States Cabarrus Family Medicine Residency Kannapolis North Carolina
United States Moncure Community Health Center Moncure North Carolina
United States Caswell Family Medical Clinic Yanceyville North Carolina

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Predicted 10-year CHD risk Framingham risk scores are well-validated and provide an absolute estimate of the likelihood of CHD events (MI, angina, and CHD death) over a 10-year time period.
We will examine absolute changes in this outcome in both intervention arms. We will also examine whether this outcome varies by subgroups of the following variables: baseline level of predicted CHD risk, age, race, SES, insurance status, overall health status, numeracy, literacy, # medications, # of perceived barriers to adherence, use of the intervention, time with the intervention, study practice site, and health counselor
4-month follow-up No
Secondary Predicted 10-year CHD risk Framingham risk scores are well-validated and provide an absolute estimate of the likelihood of CHD events (MI, angina, and CHD death) over a 10-year time period. 12 months No
Secondary Use of and adherence to cardiovascular medicines Use of cardiovascular medicines will be by self-report. Adherence to cardiovascular medicines will be measured by the 8-Item Morisky scale and a single-item specifying overall percentage adherence to cardiovascular medicines(categorical).
Participants will additionally report use of and adherence to individual medicines, including aspirin, blood pressure medicine, and cholesterol medicine. Aspirin adherence will be validated by serum thromboxane b2 in a subsample of participants. Blood pressure and cholesterol medicine use will be confirmed by changes in blood pressure and cholesterol.
4 and 12 months No
Secondary Dietary Intake Dietary intake will be measured through a combination of self-report and objective measures. Participants will self-report diet on two validated questionnaires: the block questionnaire (fruit and vegetable intake) and the fat quality screener. Fruit and vegetable intake will be objectively measured by serum carotenoids. Fat quality will be objectively measured using RBC membrane fatty acids. 4 and 12 months No
Secondary Physical activity Physical activity will be measured through a combination of self-report and objective measures. Participants will report physical activity on the validated modified RESIDE questionnaire. They will additionally wear a pedometer to monitor their daily total and aerobic steps. 4 and 12 months No
Secondary Blood pressure Blood pressure will be measure via standardized protocol using an oscillometric automatic monitor 4 and 12 months No
Secondary Total, HDL, and direct LDL cholesterol Total, HDL, and direct LDL cholesterol will be measured via enzymatic calorametric testing. 4 and 12 months No
Secondary Smoking status Smoking will be measured through a combination of self-report and urinary cotinine (Nicalert test strips). 4 and 12 months No
Secondary Adverse events We will monitor the following adverse events: ED visits (self-report), hospitalizations (self-report), deaths (family report confirmed by death registry), GI bleeds (self-report), hemorrhagic stroke (self-report), musculoskeletal injury (self-report), renal dysfunction (serum creatinine), and liver dysfunction (AST). 4 and 12 months Yes
Secondary Acceptability of the Intervention We will measure the acceptability of the intervention using process measures querying participants, office staff, and clinicians about the perceptions of the acceptability of the intervention and the time to deliver it. 4 and 12 months No
Secondary Cost-effectiveness We will measure the cost-unit CHD risk reduction for the two interventions using a societal perspective. 4 and 12 months No
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