Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Behavioral economics represents a powerful, albeit underutilized tool to influence provider and systems behavior in a large-scale, meaningful, and sustainable way. The investigators propose to use a sophisticated electronic health record (EHR) system to change the default choice for physicians to the choice most supported by clinical practice guidelines (CPG).

Multiple guidelines exist describing best practices for effective interventions, yet a large gap persists between actual and optimal guideline compliance. The proposed study will examine the comparative effectiveness of an opt-out medication management protocol relative to usual care for patients not at goal, using national guidelines for cholesterol management implemented in large multispecialty private practices that use an Electronic Health Record system.

Specific Aim: To determine the effectiveness of altering the default option in an EHR in prescribing statins to selected patients using clinical decision support.

Hypotheses: Compared to usual care, a CPG-concordant intervention designed using behavioral economics principles will significantly improve the proportion of patients who are prescribed statins.


Clinical Trial Description

Historically, many interventions have been studied to improve the quality, safety, and effectiveness of medical care, particularly through the new focus on comparative effectiveness research. Unfortunately, sustained provider and system uptake of these interventions has been severely lacking, to the serious detriment of patient health. The most commonly tried tools to increase uptake, including pay-for-performance, have substantially fallen short of expectations. Moreover, often these interventions are created in highly artificial settings, and we have not come up with ways to implement them in the long-term. The challenge, therefore, is to create sustainable change that impacts care in meaningful ways.

In contrast, behavioral economics represents a powerful tool by which to influence provider and systems behavior in a large-scale, meaningful, and sustainable way. Briefly, behavioral economics recognizes that individuals often are not fully "rational" in the purely economic sense, but are subject to the influence of various social, environmental and cognitive factors in their decision making. And, one can take advantage of these findings to "nudge" individuals, in our case physicians, towards more optimal choices. While the application of behavioral economics has been incredibly successful in altering behavior outside the health sphere, surprisingly little attention has been given to health.

We have chosen to focus on physician behavior in prescribing HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (statins) to patients with elevated cardiac risk and elevated low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) as recommended by cholesterol management guidelines. In a cluster randomized trial at several private, community-based, multispecialty practices, we propose to compare usual care to a system of automated, default, opt-out clinical decision support that prescribes statins as appropriate.

We propose to use a cluster randomized trial design in several multispecialty private practices to examine the comparative effectiveness of an EHR-based lipid management protocol based on ATP III guidelines vs. usual care. Cluster randomization of participating physicians is useful when blinding is impossible and "contamination" might be a problem, i.e. more aggressive management among a physician's non-intervention patients as a result of experience with intervention patients. Of an estimated 150 primary care physicians at the recruited private practices, we expect at least 100 to consent to participate. Physicians will be clustered for randomization based on the number of patients in their panel that meet ATP III guidelines for statin. Physicians in each cluster will then be individually randomized to the intervention or control arm.

Physicians randomized to usual care will not get the intervention or decision support. Physicians randomized to the automated clinical decision support "nudge" will see the new "optout" prescribing procedure as part of their EHR interface. This will include initially prescribing the guideline-based medication, simvastatin 20mg. Nearly six months after this visit, physicians will receive a reminder via EHR to schedule a follow-up fasting lipid profile as recommended by ATP III guidelines. ;


Study Design

Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Prospective


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01575171
Study type Observational
Source New York University School of Medicine
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date September 2010
Completion date May 2015

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04998695 - Health Effects of Consuming Olive Pomace Oil N/A
Recruiting NCT03947866 - Ezetimibe-Rosuvastatin Evaluation Study
Completed NCT01709513 - Study of Alirocumab (REGN727/SAR236553) in Patients With Primary Hypercholesterolemia and Moderate, High, or Very High Cardiovascular (CV) Risk, Who Are Intolerant to Statins (ODYSSEY ALTERNATIVE) Phase 3
Completed NCT01212900 - Randomized Trial of Imaging Versus Risk Factor-Based Therapy for Plaque Regression Phase 4
Completed NCT00001154 - Lipoprotein Metabolism in Normal Volunteers and Patients With High Levels of Lipoproteins
Completed NCT02550288 - A Clinical Trial to Assess the Efficacy and Safety of MK-0653C in Japanese Participants With Hypercholesterolemia (MK-0653C-383) Phase 3
Completed NCT03929198 - Translation of Pritikin Program to the Community N/A
Completed NCT04485793 - Effect of a Dietary Supplement on Lipid Pattern and Liver Parameters in Hypercholesterolemia N/A
Completed NCT02341924 - Validating the "Foods for Health" Portfolio of Functional Food Products N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT02223793 - Vascular Lifestyle-Intervention and Screening in Pharmacy N/A
Completed NCT01941836 - Evaluation of ETC-1002, Ezetimibe, and the Combination in Hypercholesterolemic Patients Phase 2
Completed NCT01934608 - The Effect of Synching Prescription Refills on Adherence N/A
Recruiting NCT01705873 - Analysis on the Risk of Cardiovascular Events in HIV- Infected Subjects Treated With LPV/r Based HAART Regimen vs. an EFV Based Regimen N/A
Completed NCT01670734 - Pharmacokinetic and Tolerability of Alirocumab SAR236553 (REGN727) in Patients With Hepatic Impairment and in Healthy Subjects Phase 1
Completed NCT01678521 - Effect of LDL-apheresis on PTX3 Plasma Levels in Hypercholesterolemic Patients N/A
Completed NCT01370590 - A Study to Evaluate the Effectiveness of Ezetimibe/Atorvastatin 10 mg/20 mg Combination Tablet Compared to Marketed Ezetimibe 10 mg and Atorvastatin 20 mg Tablets in Participants With High Cholesterol (MK-0653C-185 AM1) Phase 3
Completed NCT01370603 - A Study to Evaluate the Effectiveness of Ezetimibe/Atorvastatin 10 mg/40 mg Combination Tablet Compared to Marketed Ezetimibe 10 mg and Atorvastatin 40 mg Tablets in Participants With High Cholesterol (MK-0653C-190 AM1) Phase 3
Completed NCT01446679 - Special Drug Use-Results Survey of Lipitor Tablets N/A
Completed NCT01768403 - Centralised Pan-Algerian Survey on the Undertreatment of Hypercholesterolemia N/A
Completed NCT01478789 - Efficacy of Plant Sterol-Fortified Dairy Product on Plasma Lipid and Plant Sterol Concentrations in Humans N/A