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Cardiovascular Disease Prevention in Europe and Sub-Saharan Africa (Spices_phase_2)

R

Regional University Hospital Center (CHRU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cardiovascular Risk Factors

Treatments

Other: Multi-behavioral intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03886064
29BRC18.0256_Spices_phase_2

Details and patient eligibility

About

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death in the world. 17.5 million people died in 2012 due to CVD (31% of all causes of death). In Europe more than 50% of deaths are due to CVD. The CVD mortality rate is higher in the lower socio-economic levels. Three quarters of CVD deaths occur in developing countries (LDCs). According to estimates in 2030, CVD will be responsible for more deaths than the sum of infectious, nutritional, maternal and perinatal diseases in developing countries. The lack of an adequate primary care network in developing countries limits the screening and treatment of people with CVRF. As a result, these people do not benefit from appropriate prevention, are diagnosed late and remain disabled or die at a young age, resulting in significant additional costs for families but also at the macroeconomic level.

Cardiovascular risk factor prevention measures (CVRF) have been shown to be effective. Interventions are possible on a large scale (policies against smoking and unfavorable eating habits, promoting physical activity, etc.). Actions are possible at the individual level, both in primary prevention (fight against the FDRCV) and secondary, where many treatments have proven their effectiveness. These interventions are effective and profitable from a macroeconomic point of view. It has been estimated that the cost for such interventions would not exceed 4% of health expenditure in developing countries and 1-2% in rich countries.

The World Health Organization (WHO) stresses the importance of the triad composed by the patient and his family, the community and health professionals. Results are possible only when these three components work together for the same purpose. Many studies show the benefit of people's involvement in care in rich and developing countries.

SPICES project builds on progress in HIV / AIDS treatment in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and chronic disease management through the Innovative Care for Chronic Conditions (ICCC Framework), WHO plan. With regard to HIV treatment, these interventions have proven to be effective and cost-effective in many SSA countries, both in terms of disease control and adherence. These data on communicable and infectious diseases seem to be transferable to non-communicable diseases.

These projects were born from the observation that the model of care of the rich countries (individual approach of the patient, centered on the hospital and the specialist with a regular clinical and paraclinical follow-up) could not be transposed to the developing countries, because the limitation of human, technical and financial resources. But also that this model was becoming more and more difficult to maintain in developed countries or resources become limited. New approaches need to be developed to increase the effectiveness of health systems.

A paradigm shift is needed to improve the control of CVD with greater cost-effectiveness.

The SPICES project incorporates the most up-to-date knowledge to improve the prevention and control of CVD in high-, middle- and low-income countries.

Rich countries and developing countries are therefore involved in the study. The selected sites are France, United Kingdom, Belgium, South Africa and Uganda.

Some main axes of the ICCC Framework will be developed in SPICES:

  • improve the efficiency of health professionals through the delegation of skills and appropriate training,
  • center care around the patient and his family and more generally his caregivers,
  • simplify the monitoring and treatment protocols,
  • support patients in their community and emphasize prevention, information and patient education.

A first step of observation in the various countries made it possible to make an inventory of fixtures and to target the most adapted interventions.

The following steps are the implementation of these interventions (delegation of skills, information campaign and screening, improve the availability of treatments, measure of strengthening of compliance, etc. ..) and their evaluation.

This study, carried out in France and integrated into the SPICES project, will test the best non-pharmacological interventions selected in the community and by the community.

Enrollment

583 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Within the general population, all persons over 18 years of age living or working in the country Center Bretagne (including Pays Pays Ouest Bretagne, Pleyben and Callac) with a moderate cardiovascular risk score based on the Interheart clinical risk score (score 9-15).

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnancy
  • Age under 18 years old
  • Patient in secondary cardiovascular prevention
  • Nobody living or working in Central Brittany (Pays Center Ouest Bretagne and Pays de Pleyben and Callac)
  • Low (<9) or high cardiovascular risk score by Interheart score (> 15).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

583 participants in 2 patient groups

Control group
No Intervention group
Description:
Only measurement of clinical endpoints at time zero, then at 6, 12, 18 and 24 months and minimal counseling.
Interventional group
Other group
Description:
Measurement of clinical endpoints at time zero, then at 6, 12, 18 and 24 months and minimal counseling followed by multi-behavioral intervention adapted to local resources.
Treatment:
Other: Multi-behavioral intervention

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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