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Project 1: ACHIEVE- HTN

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Wayne State University

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Hypertension
Undiagnosed Diseases

Treatments

Behavioral: PAL2

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05295758
IRB-22-01-4343

Details and patient eligibility

About

This project is part of the ACHIEVE GREATER (Addressing Cardiometabolic Health Inequities by Early PreVEntion in the GREAT LakEs Region) Center (IRB 100221MP2A), the purpose of which is to reduce cardiometabolic health disparities and downstream Black-White lifespan inequality in two cities: Detroit, Michigan, and Cleveland, Ohio. The ACHIEVE GREATER Center will involve three separate but related projects that aim to mitigate health disparities in risk factor control for three chronic conditions, hypertension (HTN, Project 1), heart failure (HF, Project 2) and coronary heart disease (CHD, Project 3), which drive downstream lifespan inequality. All three projects will involve the use of Community Health Workers (CHWs) to deliver an evidence-based practice intervention program called PAL2. All three projects will also utilize the PAL2 Implementation Intervention (PAL2-II), which is a set of structured training and evaluation strategies designed to optimize CHW competence and adherence (i.e., fidelity) to the PAL2 intervention program. The present study is Project 1 of the ACHIEVE GREATER Center

Full description

Hypertension (HTN) is the leading risk factor for global morbidity and mortality, accounting for a significant proportion of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (CVD), heart failure and chronic kidney disease. Even mild elevations in blood pressure (BP) are harmful whereby individuals with stage 1 HTN (130-139/80-89 mm Hg) are already at double CVD risk. Accordingly, the latest HTN guidelines advocated for earlier treatment to reduce the health consequences and prevent the progression to more severe stages which further increases CVD risk. While nearly half of all Americans have HTN, Black adults suffer from a higher prevalence, worse control rates, and more frequent adverse health effects. They are also at heightened risk for an earlier and accelerated progression from mild to more severe HTN. Unfortunately, little progress has been made over past decades in mitigating health inequities related to high BP. In fact, predominantly Black cities such as Detroit disproportionately suffer from nearly twice the national average mortality rate due to CVD.

Mounting evidence shows that pervasive negative social determinants of heath (SDoH) are major drivers of these inequities and represent a critical barrier to achieving BP control in Black hypertensives. Core issues include poor access to healthcare and a burdensome system for care linkage especially in under-resourced settings, low health education and literacy, and structural inadequacies in care delivery including a failure to address the spectrum of life circumstances that elevate BP and hinder the adoption of salutary lifestyle changes. These systemic issues must be addressed, and remedied early in the hypertension disease process, if the health burden and CVD sequela of high BP are to be successfully reduced in Black communities. To address parallel racial inequities related to COVID-19 in Detroit, we developed an innovative mobile health unit (MHU) program that uses geospatial health and social vulnerability data to target deployment of specially outfitted vehicles to predominately Black communities with the highest needs. Since April 2020, Wayne Health Mobile Unit conducted 550 events with 220 community partners where 45,000 people have been vaccinated or tested for COVID.

In PROJECT 1 (ACHIEVE HTN), of the ACHIEVE GREATER (Addressing Cardiometabolic Health Inequities by Early Prevention in the Great Lakes Region) research center, the project proposes an innovative approach to identify and control HTN at its earliest stages in undiagnosed Black adults, potentially yielding an enormous benefit towards lifetime health equity. Using a hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation and quasi-experimental design, we will leverage our MHU platform to implement a program that links low CVD risk Black adults with stage 1 HTN to collaborative care delivered by non-physicians, community health workers (CHWs) and pharmacists, consisting of a personalized, adaptable approach to lifestyle and life circumstance (PAL2) intervention for 12-months. Core features of PAL2 include the ability to choose from a menu of readily available interventions that address individual negative SDoH, culturally sensitive health and lifestyle education, and adaptability over time according to its acceptance, effectiveness (reduction in home BP), and evolving patient needs. If BP remains ≥130/80 mm Hg after 6 months, a pharmacist-directed medical treatment algorithm will be added to PAL2 to achieve timely BP control. Program benefits, including BP-lowering, will be assessed during implementation (12-months) and maintenance phases (year 2) after linkage to medical care.

Enrollment

8 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 95 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • In order to be eligible to participate in this study, an individual must meet all of the following criteria:

    1. Self-identified Black/African Americans
    2. Detroit-area residents (defined as those who attend attended a Detroit-area community event)
    3. > 18 years of age
    4. Screening systolic BP 130-139 and diastolic BP < 90 mm Hg
    5. Not currently taking medications for HTN (Untreated)
    6. 10-year cardiovascular risk < 10% per ASCVD calculator (as such nearly all patients will be <50-55 years of age)
    7. Baseline home systolic BP 120-159 mm Hg and diastolic BP < 100 mm Hg

Exclusion criteria

  • An individual who meets any of the following criteria will be excluded from participation in this study:

    1. History of clinical cardiovascular disease (CVD)
    2. History of kidney disease or eGFR <60 mL/min from screening labs
    3. Self-reported pregnancy (or planning to be pregnant in the next year)
    4. History of diabetes or HbA1c > 6.5% from SOC screening labs
    5. Non-HDL-C > 220 mg/dL from SOC labs (potential genetic hyperlipidemia)
    6. Arm circumference > 18'' (home BP arm cuff will be inaccurate)
    7. Baseline home BP average > 160mm Hg systolic and/or >100 mm Hg diastolic

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

8 participants in 1 patient group

PAL2 Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Overall study cohort will be enrolled into non-randomized active treatment
Treatment:
Behavioral: PAL2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Robert D Brook, MD; Andrea Mack-Jones

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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