The objective of this project is to increase the proportion of patients with AF that receive adequate stroke prevention therapy. Over half of patients with AF who suffer strokes are permanently disabled. Yet there remains a large portion of patients who do not receive appropriate stroke prevention therapy. The investigators hypothesize that a toolkit of quality improvement strategies in primary care could increase the proportion of patients with atrial fibrillation appropriately treated with stroke prevention therapy. The investigators' goal is to ensure the toolkit of interventions can be easily incorporated into day-to-day practice in primary care and can be readily and broadly disseminated if successful.
The prevalence of atrial fibrillation (AF) is growing as the population ages and 15% of all strokes are already attributed to AF. Unfortunately, half of patients with AF do not receive prescriptions for anticoagulation to prevent stroke due to a variety of system, provider, and patient-level barriers. The investigators will conduct a pragmatic, cluster-randomized controlled trial to test a 'toolkit' of quality improvement interventions in primary care. In keeping with the recommendations of the chronic care model to simultaneously facilitate proactive care by providers and activate patients, the toolkit includes provider- focused strategies (education, audit and feedback, electronic medical record-based tools including decision support and reminders) plus patient-directed strategies (educational letters and reminders). Thirty three primary care clinics will be randomized to the intervention or usual care. The trial will last 12 months and will be powered to show a difference of 10% in the primary outcome of proportion of patients receiving guideline-concordant care for stroke prevention. Analysis will be blind to allocation.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
5,000
educational and informatics-based interventions, including brief guideline summary, decision support and audit and feedback
Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Proportion of patients with AF receiving guideline-concordant stroke prevention therapy
Patients with risk factors for stroke (ie. CHADS2 \>1 or age \>65) who are prescribed anticoagulants and patients with no risk factors for stroke (ie. CHADS2 = 0 and age \<65) who are not prescribed anticoagulants will be considered to be receiving guideline concordant therapy. (For patients with CHADS2 = 1 but aged \< 65 the guideline recommendations are unclear, so these patients will not be considered in the primary analysis. For example, in patients with AF and hypertension at a younger age, anticoagulation or aspirin or no treatment would each be reasonable.)
Time frame: one year
proportion of patients taking warfarin in therapeutic range
patients must have INR measured 8 times during the year and therapeutic range assessed using Rosendaal method
Time frame: one year
proportion of patients taking a novel anticoagulant with appropriate dosing
Dabigatran, rivaroxaban and apixaban should be dose-adjusted in renal failure and avoided if estimated creatinine clearance is \<30. Lower dose dabigatran is recommended for patients over 80.
Time frame: one year
proportion receiving aspirin
Time frame: one year
proportion receiving clopidogrel
Time frame: one year
proportion achieving target blood pressure
target defined as \<130/80 for patients with diabetes, \<150/80 for patients over 80, and \<140/90 for all others
Time frame: one year
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