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Future Optimal Research and Care Evaluation (FORCE-ACS)

J

J.M. ten Berg

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Acute Coronary Syndrome
Myocardial Infarction

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT03823547
Hart Beter/FORCE-ACS

Details and patient eligibility

About

Rationale: Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is the leading cause of death worldwide. To improve cardiovascular care, research is needed. Current guidelines are mainly based on well controlled RCT's, though evaluation of the impact of such RCT's in the real world is missing. In order to evaluate the impact and to overcome certain limitations of RCT's, a more practical approach is required. In this sense the use of nonrandomized observational studies is an important tool for determining the effectiveness of a therapy in routine clinical practice. One way to gain insight in characteristics of patients presenting in daily clinical practice, is to simply register these characteristics in a prospective manner with adequate follow up.

Objective: To create an ongoing registry for evaluation of clinical long-term impact of diagnostics, various treatments and devices used for ACS, for research and evaluation of quality of care and to evaluate and improve regional quality of care and cooperation between PCI and non-PCI centers.

Full description

Rationale:

Acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is the leading cause of death worldwide. To improve cardiovascular care, research is needed. Current guidelines are mainly based on well controlled RCT's, though evaluation of the impact of such RCT's in the real world is missing. Different clinical settings, non-ideal therapy adherence and broader patient populations in the real world than those studied in traditional RCTs may however provide different results. Furthermore, RCTs are intrinsically limited to answer questions about a specific population of interest, require substantial resource investments and may have limitations in investigating certain issues for ethical reasons.

In order to evaluate the impact and to overcome certain limitations of RCT's, a more practical approach is required. In this sense the use of nonrandomized observational studies is an important tool for determining the effectiveness of a therapy in routine clinical practice. One way to gain insight in characteristics of patients presenting in daily clinical practice, is to simply register these characteristics in a prospective manner with adequate follow up. These characteristics may include clinical parameters but also possibly genetic information. Such a detailed registry is now possible due to improvements in information technology, as electronic patient records permit more (semi-) automatic and uniform capture of clinical parameters and outcomes. While observational studies may often be limited in their ability to account for confounding and bias due to patient selection, recent evidence has shown that by careful use of advanced statistical analytical methods and open reporting paradigms the quality of the level of evidence is excellent.

Objectives:

  1. To create a database for future research, especially in the view of personalized medicine, and quality of care.
  2. To evaluate clinical long-term impact of medication, devices and diagnostic tools used for patients with an ACS.
  3. To test the efficacy and safety of any new drug/device versus the current treatment and the results of any drug/device in daily practice versus in trials
  4. To evaluate routine follow-up and current health-care pathways in patients with acute coronary syndrome in the Dutch healthcare system in terms of mortality, recurrent ischemic events, recurrent hospital admissions and quality of life
  5. To evaluate the use of risk scores (e.g. PRECISE-DAPT score, DAPT-score) to define the optimal duration of antiplatelet drugs
  6. To evaluate follow-up of patients referred to general practitioners as compared to of patients continued to be treated by cardiologists
  7. To increase adherence to current guidelines, taking into account the ongoing improvements of modern patient care and future changes of treatment guidelines in patients with ACS in order to improve secondary prevention in terms of reducing recurrent ischemic events and preventing adverse outcomes, such as bleeding

Enrollment

99,999 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All patients presenting with ACS
  • Age ≥ 18 years

Exclusion criteria

  • No oral or signed informed consent available.

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Central trial contact

Jur M. Ten Berg, MD, PhD; Dean R.P.P. Chan Pin Yin, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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