Hypertension Clinical Trial
— ANDESOfficial title:
Addressing HyperteNsion and Diabetes Through Community-Engaged Systems in Puno, Peru (ANDES Study)
Hypertension (HTN) has become the largest driver of morbidity and mortality (M&M) worldwide, affecting nearly 1 billion persons, the vast majority living in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). While clinical research has identified highly-efficacious and inexpensive options to control HTN, rates of awareness, treatment and control of HTN are abysmally low. Implementation strategies that can effectively reach and engage patient populations while feasible within the constraints of frail health systems are urgently needed. In Peru, less than 10% of those with HTN are optimally controlled and thus avoidable M&M continues to increase at unacceptable levels. In the proposed ANDES strategy, ANDES research team will study a vulnerable, impoverished indigenous Andean population that has a high prevalence of HTN (18.5%) and Type 2 Diabetes (T2D) (7.4%); living at high altitude. The study has two phases: UG3/UH3. During the formative UG3 phase (ended 12/31/22) we completed 3 aims, including: a) adapting community-based service delivery models for detection/control of HTN/T2D using stakeholder-engaged approaches; and b) assessed short-term implementation and service outcomes of pilot Health Fairs to detect HTN/T2D and a CHW-led model for engagement and treatment of HTN/T2D in two communities. A number of stakeholder in-depth interviews revealed significant limitations to HTN control. Discrete Choice Experiments (DCEs) surveys helped understand attributes for a community health worker (CHW)-led HTN care program that patients would value. Human-Centered Design was used to refine CHWs manual prototype, frequency and content of training sessions on patients, training CHW, supervision and integration into the healthcare system; facility-based health worker training content and approaches; identified opportunities for CHWs to improve health care system by helping to promote hypertension diagnosis, treatment and control. All these activities were used to refine the protocol that was tested in the pilot study where 1,079 subjects underwent blood pressure monitoring under a Standard Operating Procedure using electronic tablets to construct a REDCap database. The UH3 phase will test the adapted ANDES strategy. ANDES is a two-arm, individually randomized superiority trial with parallel assignment. The overall objective of ANDES is to evaluate the effectiveness of a home-based Health Agent-led intervention in reducing blood pressure and improving diabetes control in patients from under-resourced communities in Puno, Peru. Potential ANDES study participants will be identified, screened, and recruited via 2 different mechanisms: 1) community health fairs and 2) healthcare facility-based enrollment. Health fair planning, will be conducted in collaboration with DIRESA & EsSalud and local healthcare facility leaders. All health fair attendees will be screened for blood pressure measurements. ANDES research study staff will do screening at tents in the health facilities after doctors refer patients (or for any patients to visit who want) to inquire about their willingness for an in-person screening visit at their home. Recruitment will be rolling over 24 months during which 1068 participants in total (534 participants per arm) will be enrolled. To detect a difference in systolic blood pressure of 2.5 mmHg between intervention and control arms with 95% confidence, 90% power and a standard deviation of 12 mmHg, ANDES research team would need 485 participants per arm. Assuming a conservative lost-to-follow-up of 10% at 12 months, ANDES research team would need to randomize 1068 participants in total (534 participants per arm). The primary outcome is to determine if the ANDES intervention impacts SBP in comparison to the usual care arm 12 months after randomization. ANDES participants will initiate one of two care pathways according to the randomization assignment. Participants in the usual care group will be referred to their local healthcare facility for evaluation and/or to receive medical therapy per typical standard of care and at the discretion of the treating physician for the entirety of the ANDES study. Participants in the ANDES intervention group will receive the ANDES implementation package consisting of health agent home visits for 12 consecutive months. Implementation package delivery will end after month 12, at which time intervention participants will be advised to obtain standard care from their local healthcare facility. Study outcome measures will be obtained in both the usual care and ANDES intervention group at months 12 and 18 post-randomization. All participants will receive visits at baseline, 12 and 18 months for study outcome assessments. Intervention participants will additionally receive a total of 12 visits by health agents as part of the intervention package, for a total of 18 visits for those assigned to the intervention group.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 1068 |
Est. completion date | January 31, 2027 |
Est. primary completion date | March 31, 2025 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: 1. Diagnosis of HTN, defined as one or more of the following: 1. Physician-prescribed use of antihypertensive medications, and SBP=130 mmHg and/or DBP=80 mmHg 2. Physician diagnosed hypertension defined as a hypertensive blood pressure measurement (SBP=140 mmHg and/or DBP=90 mmHg) documented or measured on two or more separate occasions. 2. Willing and available to receive health agent home visits monthly for the next year. 3. Receiving healthcare through MINSA or EsSalud healthcare systems Exclusion Criteria: 1. Less than 18 years old;. 2. Has a SBP less than 140 mmHg and DBP less than 90 mmHg and is not currently taking medication; 3. Has a SBP less than 130 mmHg and DBP less than 80 mmHg if currently taking hypertension medication; 4. Unwilling, unable, or or not cognitively capable of providing informed consent; 5. Pregnant or plan to become pregnant in the next 18 months; 6. Plan to move out of the study area in the next 18 months; 7. Are not ambulatory, particularly if bedridden; 8. Currently receives home medical visits; 9. Life expectancy less than 6 months. 10. Lives more than approximately 1 hour from Puno city center; 11. Plan to travel for more than 3 months in the next year; 12. Another ANDES participant already lives in their home; 13. Patients on dialysis or expecting to start dialysis within the next 12 months; 14. Patients with liver failure (meeting Child-Pugh B or C criteria) |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Peru | PRISMA | Puno |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia | Asociacion Benefica Prisma, Johns Hopkins University, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), National Institutes of Health (NIH), Washington University School of Medicine |
Peru,
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* Note: There are 28 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Implementation outcome: Fidelity of the implementation strategy | Percentage of total possible visits by health agents that were 1) attempted and 2) conducted.
Percentage of visits in which a health agent adhered to health coaching protocol. |
12 months | |
Other | Acceptability of implementation strategy | Community health worker acceptability of the ANDES implementation strategy as assessed via in-depth interviews with all community health workers after the completion of all 12-month participant visits. | 12 months | |
Other | Participant acceptability of the ANDES implementation strategy | Participant acceptability of the ANDES implementation strategy as assessed using the validated "Trust in Community Health Workers" survey. This survey is designed to assess patient trust in community health workers (CHWs) across 2 domains: "Health Care Competence" and "Respectful Communication." (The survey comprises 10 questions (2 questions per domain). Each question asks participants to assess the frequency with which CHWs conduct an activity or service that demonstrates qualities in these domains. Participants respond to each of the ten questions using a 4-point Likert scale: 4 = all of the time, 3 = most of the time, 2= some of the time, 1 = never. The minimum total value on this scale is 10 (4 x 10 questions), indicating the lowest level of trust, and the maximum value is 40 (4 x 10 questions), denoting the highest level of trust.) | 12 months | |
Other | Implementation outcome: Service Outcomes | Percentage of patients who take medication as prescribed at 12 months.
Percentage of patients who implement recommended lifestyle/behavioral changes at 12 months. Percentage of patients who visit a health facility following referral by health agent at 12 months. Percentage of patients who were undiagnosed at enrollment who have a diagnosis at 12 months |
12 months | |
Other | Implementation outcome: Cost Outcomes | Predicted change in system-level costs following a system-wide implementation of the ANDES intervention (based on predicted differences in healthcare utilization) | 12 months | |
Other | Implementation outcome: Sustainability | Percentage of participants with controlled hypertension (BP <140/<90 mmHg) at 18 months.
Percentage of participants with HbA1c = 6.5 % at 18 months Percentage of patients who take medication as prescribed at 18 months. Percentage of patients who implement recommended lifestyle/behavioral changes at 18 months. Percentage of patients at 18 months who have had at least one health facility visit for their hypertension within the preceding 3 months |
18 months | |
Primary | Effectiveness outcome: Systolic Blood Pressure | Systolic blood pressure (SBP) (mmHg) at 12 months after randomization. | 12 months | |
Secondary | Effectiveness outcome: Diastolic blood pressure | Diastolic blood pressure (DBP) (mmHg) at 12 months after randomization. | 12 months | |
Secondary | Effectiveness outcome: Controlled hypertension | Percentage of participants with controlled hypertension (BP<140/<90 mmHg) at 12 months. | 12 months | |
Secondary | Effectiveness outcome: HbA1c | Percentage of participants with HbA1c = 6.5 % at 12 months. | 12 months |
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