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ACHIEVE-P4: PATHFINDER is a randomized, blinded clinical trial of portable air cleaners (PAC) provided at the time of hospital discharge to Heart Failure (HF) patients. It will be carried out at Henry Ford Hospitals. This project is part of the ACHIEVE GREATER (Addressing Cardiometabolic Health In Populations Through Early PreVEntion in the GREAT LakEs Region) Center (IRB 100221MP2A). The ACHIEVE GREATER Center involves several separate but related projects that aim to prolong lifespan among Detroit, MI and Cleveland, OH, for three chronic conditions, hypertension (HTN, Project 1), heart failure (HF, Projects 2 & 4) and coronary heart disease (CHD, Project 3). The present study is Project 4 (Aim 1) a randomized clinical trial titled: Portable Air cleaners to Treat Heart Failure and Negate Disparities of Environment and Race (PATHFINDER), of the ACHIEVE GREATER Center.
Project 4 is a randomized, double-blind, parallel limb trial of 400 patients with hospitalized HF who will be provided active PAC vs sham at discharge from HFH.
Participants will receive two PACs at discharge and an indoor PM2.5 sensor. PACs will be randomized to either active PAC with HEPA filters or sham PAC without HEPA filters.
Researchers will compare the following outcomes of the two groups (more outcomes below in Outcome Measures section):
Full description
Project 4 of ACHIEVE GREATER aims to improve outcomes for symptomatic (Stage C) HF. This is vitally important because HF is the most common final manifestation of cardiometabolic diseases in the U.S., accounting for nearly 400,000 deaths and 900,000 hospitalizations per year. Growing evidence implicates air pollutants adversely impact HF and its prognosis. For example, among 12,474 HF patients in North Carolina, hospital readmission rates at 90-days were increased by 13-14% for every 1 μg/m3 elevation in fine particulate matter <2.5 µm air pollution (PM2.5) levels. While average U.S. air quality has improved, urban communities continue to have higher levels of exposure. Indeed, Detroit residents face the highest PM2.5 concentrations in Michigan (97th percentile for the U.S.). We hypothesize that this may contribute to worse outcomes among HF patients in Detroit, including an unacceptably high rate of death or rehospitalization (22% based on Henry Ford Health [HFH] data for 2022) at 90-days post-discharge. To combat this problem, we propose to test an emerging therapeutic intervention, the portable air cleaner (PAC), that we hypothesize will reduce personal-level exposure to PM2.5 resulting in improved clinical outcomes for HF patients. This novel intervention is both practical and scalable, and thus has the potential to revolutionize the treatment of HF and improve related outcomes nationwide.
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400 participants in 2 patient groups
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Samantha Hochstadt, MS; Whitney Cabral, MS
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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