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IMplementation of an RCT to imProve Treatment With Oral AntiCoagulanTs in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation (IMPACT-AFib)

Primary Purpose

Atrial Fibrillation, Stroke

Status
Active
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
United States
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Early Patient-Level and Provider-Level Educational Intervention
Delayed Provider-Level Educational Intervention
Sponsored by
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional prevention trial for Atrial Fibrillation focused on measuring AF, AFib, OAC, Atrial fibrillation, Oral anticoagulant, Education

Eligibility Criteria

30 Years - undefined (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Two or more diagnoses of AF (ICD-9 and/or 10 codes) at least one day apart and with at least one diagnosis within the last 12 months prior to the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification
  2. CHA₂DS₂-VASc score of 2 or greater
  3. Medical and pharmacy insurance coverage of at least the prior year as identified via administrative claims databases of one of the participating data partners as of the date of randomization
  4. Age 30 years or greater as of the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Evidence of OAC medication fill during the 12 months prior to randomization (determined at randomization for the early intervention cohort and 12 months post-randomization for the delayed intervention cohort)
  2. Conditions other than AF that require anticoagulation, including treatment of deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, or ever having had a mechanical prosthetic heart valve prior to the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification
  3. Pregnancy within 6 months of the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification
  4. Any known history of intracranial hemorrhage prior to the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification
  5. Hospitalization for bleeding within the last 6 months of the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification
  6. Patients with recent P2Y12 antagonist use (i.e. clopidogrel, prasugrel, ticlopidine, or ticagrelor within 90 days of the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification

Sites / Locations

  • Humana Healthcare Research, Inc.
  • Harvard Pilgrim Health Care
  • OptumInsight, Inc
  • Aetna, Inc.

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm Type

Experimental

Experimental

Arm Label

Intervention

Control

Arm Description

Educational mailing to (1) AF patients with guideline-based indications for oral anticoagulation (CHA₂DS₂-VASc score of 2 or greater) who appear to not have received OAC treatment at time of randomization and (2) their providers, where an individual provider may be identified

Educational mailing to providers of AF patients with guideline-based indications for oral anticoagulation (CHA₂DS₂-VASc score of 2 or greater) who appear to not have received OAC treatment in the time following randomization. These patients will have received 'usual care' for the time between randomization and delayed educational mailing.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Proportion of patients with evidence of at least one OAC dispensing (prescription fill) (defined as one OAC dispensing or 4 INR (International Normalized Ratio) tests)
Evaluate the effect of the patient and provider education interventions (versus usual care with delayed provider education intervention) on the proportion of patients with evidence of at least one OAC prescription fill (defined as one OAC dispensing or 4 INR tests) over the course of the 12 months of follow-up.

Secondary Outcome Measures

Rates of hospitalization for ischemic or unknown stroke
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on rates of ischemic / unknown stroke hospitalization
Rates of hospitalization for hemorrhagic stroke
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on rates of hospitalization for hemorrhagic stroke
Rates of hospitalization for ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on rates of hospitalization for ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke
Rates of hospitalization for ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke or systemic embolism
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on rates of hospitalization for ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke or systemic embolism
Rates of hospitalization for ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke or systemic embolism or bleeding
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on rates of hospitalization for ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke or systemic embolism or bleeding
Rates of hospitalization for bleeding
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on rates of hospitalization for any bleeding
Time to first OAC dispensing
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on time to first OAC dispensing (prescription fill)
Proportion of days covered by OAC dispensing
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on proportion of days covered by OAC dispensings (prescription fills)
Proportion of patients on oral anticoagulation
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on proportion of patients on oral anticoagulation at 12 months of follow-up
All-cause in-hospital mortality rates
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on all-cause in-hospital mortality rates
Health care utilization for AF patients
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on health care utilization for AF patients, which would be reported as counts of number of health care utilization events (outpatient visits, days hospitalized, number of emergency department visits, etc.)

Full Information

First Posted
July 7, 2017
Last Updated
December 4, 2021
Sponsor
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care
Collaborators
Duke Clinical Research Institute, Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative, Humana Inc., Aetna, Inc., OptumInsight Life Sciences, Inc., Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03259373
Brief Title
IMplementation of an RCT to imProve Treatment With Oral AntiCoagulanTs in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation
Acronym
IMPACT-AFib
Official Title
IMplementation of a Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) to imProve Treatment With Oral AntiCoagulanTs in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
December 2021
Overall Recruitment Status
Active, not recruiting
Study Start Date
September 25, 2017 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
September 30, 2020 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
December 2021 (Anticipated)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Principal Investigator
Name of the Sponsor
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care
Collaborators
Duke Clinical Research Institute, Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative, Humana Inc., Aetna, Inc., OptumInsight Life Sciences, Inc., Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
No

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
The purpose of this study is to use a decentralized claims database to determine whether education on stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation (AF) among AF patients and their providers can result in increased use of oral anticoagulants (OAC) for stroke prevention among those AF patients with guideline-based indications for oral anticoagulation (CHA₂DS₂-VASc score of 2 or greater). Specifically, the investigators will conduct a prospective, randomized, open-label education intervention trial to evaluate the effect of the early patient and provider education interventions on the proportion of patients with evidence of at least one OAC prescription fill (defined as one OAC dispensing or 4 international normalized ratio [INR tests] over the course of the follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time). A total of approximately 80,000 patients will be enrolled within multiple major health plans across the United States. The randomization will be performed by the central coordinating center, and the health plans will mail the educational intervention materials to their members and providers.
Detailed Description
The study is a prospective, randomized, and open-label education intervention trial. Patients with AF and a CHA₂DS₂-VASc score of 2 or greater will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to an intervention cohort and a control cohort within each participating health plan. The definition for OAC medication fill will be an OAC medication dispensing or at least 4 INR tests in the claims data. The claims records of the patients randomized to the intervention cohort will then be linked to "fresh" (i.e. about 1 month old) pharmacy claims data at the time of randomization. Patients without evidence of an OAC medication fill during the 12 months prior to randomization will be included in the patient-level and provider-level early educational intervention. In addition to usual care, these patients and their providers, where an individual provider may be identified, will receive a one-time mailing at trial start. Patients randomized to this early intervention with evidence of an OAC medication fill during the 12 months prior to randomization will be excluded from the trial. The control cohort will receive usual care over the initial study period. After the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time, "fresh" pharmacy claims data for the control intervention cohort that was generated and locked at the time of randomization will be used to assess trial eligibility, and those patients without evidence of an OAC medication fill during the 12 months prior to randomization will be included in the primary and secondary analyses as the control arm. Patients randomized to the control arm with evidence of an OAC medication fill during the 12 months prior to randomization will be excluded from the trial and will not be included in analyses. The baseline characteristics of the control patients will be examined at the same time point as the intervention patients, meaning at the time of randomization. The primary outcome is a comparison of the proportion of patients not on OAC during the 12 months prior to randomization, who were started on OAC over the course of the follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time in the early versus the delayed intervention arm. A total of approximately 80,000 patients (randomized 1:1) across all participating data partners (Aetna, Harvard Pilgrim, Humana, and Optum) will be enrolled from participating data partners across the United States. The follow-up time for the primary outcome will be 12 months from the date at which at least 80% of eligible study participates are enrolled (date on which early intervention materials are mailed). The providers of patients in the control cohort who did not receive OAC medication during the course of the 12-month study period and meet the inclusion criteria will receive the delayed intervention: the provider-only education intervention, a one-time mailing administered 12 months after at least 80% of early intervention mailings have occurred (patients will not receive any educational materials). The investigators intend to assess the primary and secondary endpoints again 24 months after at least 80% of early intervention mailings have occurred to assess the durability and longer-term outcomes of the effect of the patient- and provider-level education intervention, as well as the use of OAC following the delayed provider-level education intervention. However, as this second assessment is exploratory, investigators may not conduct these analyses if the results of the primary outcome are consistently null. Because the Sentinel Distributed Database will be used for follow-up information, and this information is refreshed approximately quarterly and this is done on separate timetables for the different health plans, it is likely that when at least the required follow-up time is available for at least 80% of people, there will be more than 12 or 24 months of followup for over 80% of people. All participants' outcomes will be assessed using all possible person-time; patients will have different duration of follow-up.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Atrial Fibrillation, Stroke
Keywords
AF, AFib, OAC, Atrial fibrillation, Oral anticoagulant, Education

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Prevention
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Parallel Assignment
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
64666 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Intervention
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Educational mailing to (1) AF patients with guideline-based indications for oral anticoagulation (CHA₂DS₂-VASc score of 2 or greater) who appear to not have received OAC treatment at time of randomization and (2) their providers, where an individual provider may be identified
Arm Title
Control
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Educational mailing to providers of AF patients with guideline-based indications for oral anticoagulation (CHA₂DS₂-VASc score of 2 or greater) who appear to not have received OAC treatment in the time following randomization. These patients will have received 'usual care' for the time between randomization and delayed educational mailing.
Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
Early Patient-Level and Provider-Level Educational Intervention
Intervention Description
Letters to patients that (1) explain to the patient that he or she appears to have AF, characterize the risk of stroke, and emphasize that although there may be a medical reason, the patient does not seem to be on an anticoagulant and (2) encourage the patient to discuss this with his or her provider to ask if he or she might benefit from OAC therapy to prevent stroke. Early intervention letters to providers explain this project, the nature of the problem, and identify a list of the provider's patients who have been contacted, as the provider and patient letters will be sent at approximately the same time; describe evidence and guidelines regarding oral anticoagulation.
Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
Delayed Provider-Level Educational Intervention
Intervention Description
Delayed intervention letters to patients' providers, where they may be identified, that explain this project, the nature of the problem, and identify a list of their patients who are flagged as at risk for stroke and have not been treated with an oral anticoagulant; describe evidence and guidelines regarding oral anticoagulation.
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Proportion of patients with evidence of at least one OAC dispensing (prescription fill) (defined as one OAC dispensing or 4 INR (International Normalized Ratio) tests)
Description
Evaluate the effect of the patient and provider education interventions (versus usual care with delayed provider education intervention) on the proportion of patients with evidence of at least one OAC prescription fill (defined as one OAC dispensing or 4 INR tests) over the course of the 12 months of follow-up.
Time Frame
Follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Rates of hospitalization for ischemic or unknown stroke
Description
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on rates of ischemic / unknown stroke hospitalization
Time Frame
Follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time
Title
Rates of hospitalization for hemorrhagic stroke
Description
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on rates of hospitalization for hemorrhagic stroke
Time Frame
Follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time
Title
Rates of hospitalization for ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke
Description
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on rates of hospitalization for ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke
Time Frame
Follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time
Title
Rates of hospitalization for ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke or systemic embolism
Description
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on rates of hospitalization for ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke or systemic embolism
Time Frame
Follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time
Title
Rates of hospitalization for ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke or systemic embolism or bleeding
Description
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on rates of hospitalization for ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke or systemic embolism or bleeding
Time Frame
Follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time
Title
Rates of hospitalization for bleeding
Description
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on rates of hospitalization for any bleeding
Time Frame
Follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time
Title
Time to first OAC dispensing
Description
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on time to first OAC dispensing (prescription fill)
Time Frame
Follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time
Title
Proportion of days covered by OAC dispensing
Description
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on proportion of days covered by OAC dispensings (prescription fills)
Time Frame
Follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time
Title
Proportion of patients on oral anticoagulation
Description
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on proportion of patients on oral anticoagulation at 12 months of follow-up
Time Frame
Follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time
Title
All-cause in-hospital mortality rates
Description
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on all-cause in-hospital mortality rates
Time Frame
Follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time
Title
Health care utilization for AF patients
Description
Evaluate the impact of the patient and provider education interventions on health care utilization for AF patients, which would be reported as counts of number of health care utilization events (outpatient visits, days hospitalized, number of emergency department visits, etc.)
Time Frame
Follow-up through the date on which at least 80% of eligible study participants have at least 12 months of follow-up time

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
30 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Two or more diagnoses of AF (ICD-9 and/or 10 codes) at least one day apart and with at least one diagnosis within the last 12 months prior to the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification CHA₂DS₂-VASc score of 2 or greater Medical and pharmacy insurance coverage of at least the prior year as identified via administrative claims databases of one of the participating data partners as of the date of randomization Age 30 years or greater as of the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification Exclusion Criteria: Evidence of OAC medication fill during the 12 months prior to randomization (determined at randomization for the early intervention cohort and 12 months post-randomization for the delayed intervention cohort) Conditions other than AF that require anticoagulation, including treatment of deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, or ever having had a mechanical prosthetic heart valve prior to the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification Pregnancy within 6 months of the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification Any known history of intracranial hemorrhage prior to the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification Hospitalization for bleeding within the last 6 months of the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification Patients with recent P2Y12 antagonist use (i.e. clopidogrel, prasugrel, ticlopidine, or ticagrelor within 90 days of the last date in the current approved data used for cohort identification
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Humana Healthcare Research, Inc.
City
Louisville
State/Province
Kentucky
ZIP/Postal Code
40202
Country
United States
Facility Name
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care
City
Quincy
State/Province
Massachusetts
ZIP/Postal Code
02169
Country
United States
Facility Name
OptumInsight, Inc
City
Waltham
State/Province
Massachusetts
ZIP/Postal Code
02451
Country
United States
Facility Name
Aetna, Inc.
City
Blue Bell
State/Province
Pennsylvania
ZIP/Postal Code
19422
Country
United States

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
No
Citations:
PubMed Identifier
35639381
Citation
Pokorney SD, Cocoros N, Al-Khalidi HR, Haynes K, Li S, Al-Khatib SM, Corrigan-Curay J, Driscoll MR, Garcia C, Calvert SB, Harkins T, Jin R, Knecht D, Levenson M, Lin ND, Martin D, McCall D, McMahill-Walraven C, Nair V, Parlett L, Petrone A, Temple R, Zhang R, Zhou Y, Platt R, Granger CB. Effect of Mailing Educational Material to Patients With Atrial Fibrillation and Their Clinicians on Use of Oral Anticoagulants: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Netw Open. 2022 May 2;5(5):e2214321. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.14321.
Results Reference
derived
PubMed Identifier
32589056
Citation
Garcia CJ, Haynes K, Pokorney SD, Lin ND, McMahill-Walraven C, Nair V, Parlett L, Martin D, Al-Khalidi HR, McCall D, Granger CB, Platt R, Cocoros NM. Practical challenges in the conduct of pragmatic trials embedded in health plans: Lessons of IMPACT-AFib, an FDA-Catalyst trial. Clin Trials. 2020 Aug;17(4):360-367. doi: 10.1177/1740774520928426. Epub 2020 Jun 26.
Results Reference
derived
Links:
URL
https://www.sentinelinitiative.org/sites/default/files/Methods/Mini-Sentinel_Methods_CTTI_Developing-Approaches-to-Conducting-Randomized-Trials-Usi.pdf
Description
White Paper: Developing Approaches to Conducting Randomized Trials Using the Mini-Sentinel Distributed Database
URL
https://www.sentinelinitiative.org/FDA-catalyst/projects/implementation-randomized-controlled-trial-improve-treatment-oral-anticoagulants-patients
Description
Sentinel Initiative IMPACT-AFib Project Page

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IMplementation of an RCT to imProve Treatment With Oral AntiCoagulanTs in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation

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