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PRagmatic Trial Of Messaging to Providers About Treatment of Heart Failure in the Inpatient Setting (PROMPT-HF)

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Yale University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Heart Failure

Treatments

Other: Best practice alert for the notification of patient HFrEF and recommended evidence-based medical therapies (NO drugs are being administered in this trial)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT04686604
No NIH funding (Other Identifier)
2000029438

Details and patient eligibility

About

A randomized single-blind interventional trial to test the effectiveness of an electronic medical record-based best practice alert recommending evidence-based medical therapies versus usual care in inpatient adult patients presenting with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction.

Full description

Heart failure (HF) is the major cause of healthcare expenditure, morbidity, and mortality in the United States. HF is the primary diagnosis for hospital discharge in ~1 million and a secondary diagnosis in ~2 million hospitalizations annually in the US. In fact, inpatient admissions account for more than half of HF healthcare expenditure. However, data from several registries over the last three decades has failed to see use of these evidence- based therapies at levels noted in clinical trials, despite aggressive guideline recommendations and promotion by thought leaders in the field. It remains unclear as to why many patients with HF reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) are not on evidence-based therapies especially post hospital discharge and why the percentages are consistent across national registries over time. Whether the gap between clinical trial use and real-world practice is due to a lack of knowledge or providers making individualized decisions about their patients is unclear. A simple way to test this hypothesis is to examine whether electronic health record (EHR) based "best practice advisories" (BPAs) can increase use of evidence based therapies. If found to be effective, these low cost interventions can be rapidly applied across large healthcare systems.

The goal of this trial is to determine the effectiveness of a BPA alert system that informs providers about evidence-based medical therapy for the treatment of HFrEF versus usual care (no alert) in the inpatient setting.

Enrollment

1,012 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adults ≥18 years admitted to a hospital within the Yale New Haven Hospital system (either Yale New Haven Hospital, St. Raphael's Campus, Greenwich Hospital, or Bridgeport Hospital).

  • Have HFrEF defined as:

    1. NT-pro-BNP >500 pg/ml within 24 hours of admission
    2. On IV loop diuretic within 24 hours of admission
    3. Left ventricular ejection fraction ≤40% (most recent)

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients within 48 hours of admission
  • Patients in the intensive care unit
  • Patients on hospice service
  • Patients receiving intravenous milrinone
  • Patient on NPO (nothing by mouth) order
  • Patients on all evidence based medical therapy for HFrEF (on all 4 classes of evidence based medical therapy: beta-blockers, ACEi/ARB/ARNI, MRA, SGLT2i)
  • Opted out of medical record research

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

1,012 participants in 2 patient groups

Electron Health Record-based Provider Alert
Experimental group
Description:
Providers will receive a best practice alert for each of their eligible patients upon opening of the order entry screen in the patient's medical record. The alert will inform the provider to the presence of HFrEF and of the patient's current left ventricular ejection fraction, most recent blood pressure and heart rate, most recent potassium and estimated glomerular filtration rate, and current evidence-based medications for HFrEF. It will also provide access to an order set with recommended evidence-based HFrEF therapies as well as a link to the best available guideline-recommended information regarding the treatment of heart failure.
Treatment:
Other: Best practice alert for the notification of patient HFrEF and recommended evidence-based medical therapies (NO drugs are being administered in this trial)
Usual Care
No Intervention group
Description:
Providers will not receive an alert and will proceed with usual care.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Tariq Ahmad, MD, MPH

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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