Preeclampsia is a leading cause of maternal morbidity and mortality. Low-dose aspirin prophylaxis reduces preeclampsia risk among high-risk pregnant individuals but remains underused in routine clinical practice. This pragmatic cluster-randomized implementation trial will test whether clinician notification of elevated preeclampsia risk increases aspirin prophylaxis utilization among eligible pregnant individuals receiving outpatient obstetric care. Clusters will be randomized to clinician notification versus usual care. In the intervention arm, obstetric clinicians will receive notification that a patient is at elevated risk for preeclampsia and a recommendation to consider initiation of aspirin prophylaxis between 12 and 28 weeks' gestation, as clinically appropriate. The intervention does not assign participants to aspirin and does not require any study-mandated medication. All decisions regarding aspirin prophylaxis will remain at the discretion of the treating obstetric clinician and patient.
This study is a pragmatic, cluster-randomized implementation trial conducted across two medical centers. The trial will evaluate whether clinician notification of elevated preeclampsia risk increases utilization of aspirin prophylaxis among eligible pregnant individuals in routine outpatient obstetric care. Eligible encounters will include pregnant individuals receiving outpatient obstetric care who are identified as having elevated risk for preeclampsia based on a clinical risk prediction model. Clusters, defined as outpatient obstetric clinics, care teams, or clinician groups, will be randomized to clinician notification or usual care. For encounters assigned to the intervention arm, clinicians will receive a notification indicating that the patient is at elevated predicted risk for preeclampsia. The notification will recommend consideration of aspirin prophylaxis initiation between 12 and 28 weeks' gestation when clinically appropriate and consistent with applicable clinical guidelines. The notification is intended to support clinician awareness and evidence-based preventive care. It does not mandate aspirin use or assign patients to receive aspirin. Encounters assigned to usual care will proceed according to existing clinical workflows without study-generated clinician notification. The primary outcome will be aspirin prophylaxis utilization, defined by electronic health record evidence of aspirin prescription, active medication list entry, or documented clinician recommendation during the eligible gestational window.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
1,000
A clinician-facing electronic or workflow-based notification identifying elevated predicted preeclampsia risk and recommending consideration of aspirin prophylaxis according to routine clinical care and applicable guidelines.
Mass General Brigham
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Aspirin prophylaxis utilization
Proportion of eligible patient encounters with evidence of aspirin prophylaxis utilization, defined as aspirin prescription, aspirin documented on the medication list, or clinician documentation recommending aspirin prophylaxis during the eligible gestational window.
Time frame: From 12 weeks' gestation through 28 weeks' gestation
Aspirin prescription or medication list entry
Proportion of eligible encounters with aspirin prescribed or documented as an active medication in the electronic health record.
Time frame: From 12 weeks' gestation through 28 weeks' gestation
Clinician documentation of aspirin recommendation
Proportion of eligible encounters with clinician documentation recommending aspirin prophylaxis for preeclampsia prevention.
Time frame: From 12 weeks' gestation through 28 weeks' gestation
Timing of aspirin prophylaxis implementation
Gestational age at first evidence of aspirin prescription, medication list entry, or documented clinician recommendation.
Time frame: From 12 weeks' gestation through 28 weeks' gestation
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