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Multicomponent Intervention to Improve Hypertension Control in Central America

I

Institute of Nutrition of Central America and Panama

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 3

Conditions

Arterial Hypertension

Treatments

Other: Multicomponent intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT03504124
1U01HL138647-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators propose to assess the needs, barriers, and knowledge gaps of hypertension control programs in the national health care systems of the Central America 4 region LMIC (CA-4: Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, and Nicaragua); to conduct a cluster randomized trial to test the effect of a multilevel and multicomponent intervention program leveraging an existing subnational primary healthcare system in Guatemala, on blood pressure (BP) control among hypertensive patients; and to evaluate the adaptability, feasibility, fidelity, and sustainability of implementing the program in the primary health care systems of the CA-4 region. The comprehensive intervention, which includes protocol-based treatment using a standard BP management algorithm, team-based collaborative care, BP audit and feedback, home BP monitoring, and health coaching on antihypertensive medication adherence and lifestyle modification, will last for 18 months. This implementation research study presents high public health impact because it will generate urgently needed data on effective, practical, and sustainable intervention strategies aimed at reducing BP related disease burden in Central America and other low- and middle-income countries.

Full description

Despite advances in hypertension prevention and treatment research, its prevalence is high and increasing, while the proportions of hypertensive patients who are aware, treated, and controlled are low, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). The investigators propose to: assess the needs, barriers, and knowledge gaps of hypertension control programs in the national health care systems of the Central America 4 region LMIC (CA-4: Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, and Nicaragua); conduct a cluster randomized trial to test the effect of a multilevel and multicomponent intervention program on blood pressure (BP) control among Guatemalan hypertensive patients; and evaluate the adaptability, feasibility, fidelity, and sustainability of implementing the program in the primary health care systems of the CA-4 region. The investigators will conduct formative research to assess the needs of system-wide intervention programs, barriers and facilitators of BP control strategies, and knowledge gaps about implementation for improving hypertension control in the CA-4 health care systems. The proposed trial will recruit 1,770 study participants from 32 primary care districts (55 patients aged ≥22 years with uncontrolled hypertension/district) within a subnational primary care network managed by the Guatemalan Ministry of Health. Sixteen health districts will be assigned to an 18-month multicomponent intervention, which includes protocol-based treatment using: a standard blood pressure (BP) management algorithm, team-based collaborative care, BP audit and feedback, home BP monitoring, and health coaching on antihypertensive medication adherence and lifestyle modification, and 16 to usual care. BP and other indicators will be measured at baseline and at months 6, 12, and 18. The primary clinical outcome is the difference in the proportion of patients with controlled BP (<140/90 mmHg) between the intervention and control groups at 18 months. The secondary outcome is net change in systolic and diastolic BP from baseline to 18 months. Fidelity of the intervention measured monthly by intensification of treatment by provider-teams (titration or addition of new medications) and adherence to medications in patients will be the primary implementation outcome. Other implementation outcomes will be measured every 6 months. The RE-AIM framework will guide the development, implementation, and assessment of the intervention, which will translate and adapt the Hypertension Control Program in Argentina that has been proven effective and feasible. This project have assembled a multidisciplinary investigative team, which will collaborate with the public primary care network in Guatemala to conduct this implementation research project. The intervention and study outcomes are patient-centered, and patients, MOH provider-teams, and other stakeholders will be engaged at every step of the proposed study. The investigators will disseminate the study findings and promote scale-up of the proven effective intervention program, which will generate urgently needed data on effective, adoptable, and sustainable intervention strategies aimed at reducing BP-related disease burden in CA-4 and other low-income settings.

Enrollment

1,854 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 90 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All patients aged ≥40 years with BP >140/90 mmHg at the time of enrollment
  • Patients who receive care at government health facilities

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnant women

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

1,854 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention group
Experimental group
Description:
Patients will receive a multicomponent intervention.
Treatment:
Other: Multicomponent intervention
Control group
No Intervention group
Description:
Patients will receive the usual care.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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