Current guideline directed medical therapies (GDMT) for hypertension (HTN) endorse a trial and error approach based on drug class. This pilot study will evaluate the efficacy of a Clinical Decision Support (CDS) program to assist providers with delivering a more personalized approach using individual renin-aldosterone levels and the mechanism of action of medications included in GDMT recommendations. The overarching goal is to achieve HTN control rates above the 2014 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey reported rate of 53% in a timely fashion, by individualizing medication management, thereby reducing the patient risk of stroke, heart and renal disease, and other devastating HTN-related outcomes.
Current guideline directed medical therapies (GDMT) for hypertension (HTN) endorse a trial and error approach based on drug class. This pilot study will evaluate the efficacy of a Clinical Decision Support (CDS) program to assist providers with delivering a more personalized approach using individual renin-aldosterone levels and the mechanism of action of medications included in GDMT recommendations. Current research suggests underlying mechanisms of HTN can be categorized by renin and aldosterone levels into approximately 50 categories and sub-categories. Timely identification of a patients' category is challenging for clinicians and possibly a contributing factor to the low rates of HTN control reported in the 2014 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) of 53%. The overarching goal of this study is to achieve HTN control rates above the 2014 NANES rate in a timely, cost-effective manner by individualizing medication management, thereby reducing the patient risk of stroke, heart and renal disease, and other devastating HTN-related outcomes. Specific aims are: 1) evaluate the efficacy of the CDS software program to assist providers in identifying and matching the underlying mechanisms of HTN with the mechanism of action of antihypertensive medications to achieve better HTN control rates than the 53% reported in the 2014 NHANES data, 2) assess the efficacy of the CDS program across prescribing provider levels (MD/DO, residents, and APRN/PA), and 3) Determine the impact of the CDS program on: a) medication costs, b) provider management time, c), provider and patient satisfaction with and perception of usability and efficacy of the CDS program to manage their blood pressure. This 2-phase, prospective, within-subjects, repeated measures pilot study will enroll up to 20 multi-level providers with prescriptive authority and 160 military beneficiaries with uncontrolled HTN in the Northwest to evaluate the efficacy, feasibility, and usability of a CDS program to improve blood pressure control over a six-month period.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
70
As noted in Arms
As noted in Arms
Madigan Army Medical Center
Tacoma, Washington, United States
Patients with controlled hypertension
Percent of systolic and diastolic blood pressure readings within patient-specific target goals averaged in 10-day cycles at least 70% of the time.
Time frame: 6 months
Provider Satisfaction
Provider satisfaction with efficacy, feasibility and usability of the clinical decision software program
Time frame: 6 months
Patient Satisfaction
Patient satisfaction with efficacy, feasibility and usability of the clinical decision software program
Time frame: 6 months
Provider time
Time in minutes each provider spends per patient managing uncontrolled hypertension.
Time frame: 6 months
Medication costs
Costs of medications per patient to achieve controlled hypertension using a published relative value scale
Time frame: 6 months
Time to reach blood pressure goals
Number of days from enrollment patients are not at target (70% control rate)
Time frame: 6 months
Patients with controlled hypertension by provider
Number of patients per provider level (MD, DO, Nurse Practitioner, Physician Assistant) with controlled hypertension
Time frame: 6 months
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