EHR-Embedded Decision Support to Prevent Stroke in Patients With AF

May 10, 2023 updated by: Mark Eckman, M.D., University of Cincinnati

Background and Significance - Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common significant cardiac rhythm disorder and is a powerful common risk factor for stroke. Randomized trials have demonstrated that anticoagulation can reduce the risk of stroke in patients with AF. Yet, there continues to be widespread underutilization of this therapy. To address this practice gap locally and improve stroke prevention for patients with AF in the UC Health system, the investigators have assembled an interprofessional team, the Cincinnati Atrial Fibrillation Initiative (CAFI).

Objectives - The objective of this project, "EHR-Embedded Decision Support to Prevent Stroke in Patients with AF", is to improve thromboprophylaxis treatment decisions for patients with non-valvular AF and to increase awareness of the underutilization of appropriate thromboprophylaxis in the University of Cincinnati Health system, including vulnerable populations with health disparities. To achieve this objective, the investigators will implement and evaluate the effectiveness of an Atrial Fibrillation Decision Support Tool (AFDST), embedded within the UC Health electronic health record (EHR) that will: (a) identify at the point of care, patients who might benefit substantially from a change in their current thromboprophylaxis; (b) provide patient-tailored guidance to support decision-making; and (c) provide an opportunity to refer the patient to a pharmacist-staffed AF Thromboprophylaxis Shared Decision-Making consultation service.

Overview of Study Design - The overarching goal is to improve the rate of "appropriate thromboprophylaxis" by eliminating system barriers through provision of appropriate decision support in the right place and at the right time, that improves provider and patient knowledge about AF-related stroke risks, bleeding risks, practice gaps in prevention, and how to think about balancing risks and benefits of anticoagulation therapy, and by improving patient engagement in decision-making. The investigators have designed interventions based on a conceptual model that attributes the gap between evidence and practice to the following issues: 1) provider knowledge, 2) patient understanding and engagement, 3) sociodemographic factors that create barriers to care and treatment, and 4) systems barriers such as time constraints for busy clinicians and inadequate electronic health record-integrated decision support.

The investigators will achieve the overarching goal through two aims. The first aim will be addressed by a randomized controlled trial that examines two strategies - 1) AFDST without best practice advisory [BPA] (current state), or 2) AFDST with BPA and semi-automated order set to refer patients to an AF Thromboprophylaxis Shared Decision-Making Service. The investigators will use the RE-AIM framework for the evaluation of implementation studies to assess outcomes of effectiveness, reach, and adoption.

The second aim is to evaluate the impact of shared decision-making tools and services. The investigators believe that a shared decision-making specialty service that utilizes an EHR-embedded Atrial Fibrillation Shared Decision Making Tool (AFSDM) tool will improve a number of metrics for quality care. These include, among others, decrease decisional conflict, improve patient satisfaction with decision-making, improve patient knowledge, and improve adherence with final shared treatment decisions.

Methods - The first aim will be accomplished through a clinical study in which AF patients in the UC Health primary care network will be randomized into one of two study arms. Briefly, these arms are: 1) Atrial Fibrillation Decision-Support Tool (AFDST); 2) AFDST with addition of best practice advisory (BPA) and option to refer to shared decision-making consultation services. Patients will enter the study as their clinicians receive BPAs, or in the case of the first study arm, when BPAs would have been generated as clinicians open medical records of patients for whom current thromboprophylaxis is not optimal.

The second aim will be accomplished through a pre/post study design evaluating the impact of shared decision-making tools and services. Patients will be consented and enrolled following their referral to the pharmacist-staffed AF shared decision-making service. Patients consenting to participation in this aspect of the study, will have a shared decision-making visit with one of the anticoagulation pharmacists. Information to be collected will include a number of validated measures of decision quality, patient engagement and confidence, and connection with the clinical team gathered prior to and at the conclusion of the shared decision-making visit.

Study Overview

Status

Completed

Conditions

Detailed Description

C.2.1 Specific Aim 1 - Randomized Comparative Effectiveness Study to Evaluate Atrial Fibrillation Decision-Support Tool (AFDST) vs. AFDST with addition of best practice advisory (BPA) and semi-automated order set to refer patients to AF Thromboprophylaxis Shared Decision-Making Service.

The investigators will improve the rate of "appropriate thromboprophylaxis" by eliminating system barriers through provision of appropriate decision support in the right place and at the right time, that improves provider and patient knowledge about AF-related stroke risks, bleeding risks, practice gaps in prevention, and how to think about balancing risks and benefits of anticoagulation therapy, and by improving patient engagement in decision-making.

H1 - Addition of BPA (including semi-automated order set to generate referral to an AF Thromboprophylaxis Shared Decision-Making Service) to an EHR-embedded AFDST will improve rates of "appropriate thromboprophylaxis" compared with the current state of an EHR-embedded AFDST without BPA or Shared Decision-Making Service.

The investigators will examine this hypothesis by conducting a randomized controlled trial that implements the respective bundles at ambulatory sites, using the RE-AIM framework for evaluation of implementation studies.(36-41) Outcomes will include - effectiveness, reach, and adoption.

Triggers for BPAs - New AF - Develop a BPA that will fire automatically whenever a patient without a prior history of AF receives a diagnosis of AF (either newly incident AF, or new patient to the system with prior diagnosis of AF). The BPA would provide a direct link to the AFDST, providing real-time decision support for initial treatment.

Change in Clinical Risk Factors - Implement automated process to identify situations where AFDST recommendation has changed due to changes in risk factors such that current treatment is not "optimal." Persistent AF and non-optimal thromboprophylaxis - Implement automated process to review AFDST recommendations when clinician is in patient chart. Generate BPA if current therapy is not "optimal." To minimize alerts, the investigators will generate advisories only for patients who would gain significant benefit from a change in treatment (e.g., > 0.5 QALYs). Based on prior studies, this is likely to be the most commonly triggered BPA. Clinicians will indicate whether they would like the BPA to fire again, or suppress future alerts for that patient.

C.2.2 Specific Aim 2 - Evaluate the impact of shared decision-making tools and services.

H2 - A shared decision-making specialty service that utilizes an EHR-embedded Atrial Fibrillation Shared Decision Making Tool (AFSDM) tool will improve a number of metrics for quality care. These include, among others, decrease decisional conflict, improve patient satisfaction with decision-making, improve patient knowledge, and improve adherence with final shared treatment decisions.

The investigators will evaluate this hypothesis using a pre/post study design of patients referred to the AF shared decision-making service. Outcomes will include validated measures of decision quality, patient engagement, and connection with the clinical team completed prior to, and at the conclusion of, the visit.

Develop application software - The AFSDM application will provide patient education about AF-related stroke risk, treatment options, and their risks and benefits in an inclusive manner that considers barriers to treatment that may inordinately affect vulnerable populations. The AFSDM will use individual patient preferences and values for health states, and patient-specific EHR data to generate recommendations.

Provide Shared Decision-Making Services - Develop AF Thromboprophylaxis Shared Decision-Making services for clinicians who are not comfortable making thromboprophylaxis decisions themselves. These services will be located in the UC Health anticoagulation clinic.

Facilitate Access to this Service - Use the AFDST to identify patients who might benefit from a change in treatment (see above, Triggers for BPAs) and embed electronic support to simplify referral process.

BPA will provide options for clinicians to directly address the thromboprophylaxis decision themselves, or easily refer patients to the appropriate AF Thromboprophylaxis Shared Decision-Making service.

Clinicians can indicate whether they want the Shared Decision-Making service to make the treatment decision and prescribe therapy, or only generate a recommendation to the referring clinician.

C.3. Target Population: Practices, Clinicians, and Patients - The UC Health primary care network (PCN) consists of 20 primary care practices and 144 clinicians located in the Greater Cincinnati and Tri-state area, serving more than 69,000 patients. Practices include 2 urban residency-training sites (Internal Medicine and Medicine-Pediatrics), the UCMC Internal Medicine Faculty Practice, and the Burnet Family Medicine Practice, all of which serve vulnerable patient populations. All practices and the inpatient facility use Epic® as a common EHR. A centralized data warehouse containing clinical information for the health system is housed in the university's Center for Health Informatics (CHI). UCMC is a tertiary/quaternary medical center, safety-net institution with 630 beds (283 of these are adult medical/surgical beds) serving vulnerable patient populations in the Cincinnati metropolitan area, which includes northern Kentucky and South-Eastern Indiana. Thus, the investigators estimate a total of 144 ambulatory clinicians, eligible to be randomized into this study. The investigators serve a diverse ethnic and sociodemographic patient base that includes both urban residents and rural Appalachians. While the overall proportion of Black patients in the UC Health AF cohort is 32%, 4 of the primary care practices (3 UCMC hospital-based sites and 1 community site), caring for 711 AF patients, serve a disproportionately large proportion (47% - 58%) of Black patients. Forty percent of patients are insured by Medicaid or managed Medicaid and 30% by Medicare or managed Medicare; 2% are uninsured.

C.3.1. Ambulatory Study Sites - Ambulatory visits will take place in the primary care practices and pharmacist-staffed Anticoagulation Clinic at UC Medical Center Hospital. As described above, the BPA only will fire for patients for whom the AFDST suggests an optimal treatment different from current therapy who would gain a benefit of more than 0.5 QALYs by changing current treatment. If an advisory has already fired at a previous ambulatory visit, the investigators will prevent the BPA from firing again, unless their primary clinician has requested the alert be allowed to fire again.

C.3.2. Estimated Patient Numbers - A recent data pull from the UC Health EHR identified roughly 4,700 active patients fitting these criteria in the UC Health system. Based on earlier studies, in the UC Health AF cohort, 41% of patients were receiving "non-optimal" thromboprophylaxis (1,927), and 49% of those (944) could gain 0.5 QALYs or more if they were to receive "optimal therapy." Conservatively, the investigators estimate enrollment of 800 patients (400 in each of 2 study arms) during the 18-month planned enrollment period. In addition, roughly 1,460 patients with new diagnoses of AF were seen during the most recent calendar year. Of these roughly 80% were new patients entering the system with prior diagnoses of AF and roughly 20% were established patients with newly incident AF. Thus, the investigators anticipate influx of roughly 1,215 patients with prior diagnoses of AF into the system annually. Of these, roughly 245 (1,215 x .41 x .49) might benefit substantially from a change in their current thromboprophylaxis, resulting in the potential accrual of another 122 patients in each study arm if needed. If the investigators still find they are not making patient enrollment milestones, they will lower the BPA triggering threshold for anticipated gain in QALYs from 0.5 to a reasonable but smaller gain.

C.4. Study Design and Methods C.4.1. Design of the AFDST - The current version of the AFDST is an external web application that is launched by clicking on an activity button while in the patient's EHR record. An AF data mart consisting of a set of Clarity® data tables is maintained and refreshed every 24 hours. All UC Health patients fitting inclusion and exclusion criteria are in the data mart. Information needed to calculate stroke risk (CHA2DS2VASc(18)), major hemorrhage (HASBLED(19)), and intracerebral hemorrhage(29) are contained in the data mart after being extracted using the active problem list and a combination of laboratory values and clinical measurements. These data prepopulate the AFDST when the tool is launched. The investigators ask clinicians to verify this information by adding or removing risk factors they believe are incorrect. They may also alter risk factors to use the tool to explore alternate clinical scenarios. Stroke risk and bleeding risk (extracranial and intracranial) are modified by appropriate measures of efficacy and relative hazards for each treatment. Time in therapeutic range, needed to calculate the HASBLED score, is determined by interpolating international normalized ratio values through time over the past 1 year, similar to the method by Rosendaal et al.(42) Current antithrombotic therapy (oral anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapy) is retrieved from the active medication list. Efficacy of treatment and relative risk of complications including major bleeding and intracranial hemorrhage are informed by the most up-to-date literature including meta-analyses(43, 44) and network meta-analyses(45) of the new agents in general populations and in the elderly(46, 47) along with systematic reviews of the literature, given the absence of head-to-head trials comparing the DOACs to one another.(10, 48) Logic is included to avoid recommendations for specific DOACs based on renal function, along with decision support to provide specific alternate dosing recommendations as appropriate (e.g., based on age and weight).

C.4.2. Study Design Details for Aim 1 - At the beginning of the study, the investigators will take a snapshot of current thromboprophylaxis practice in the UC Health Primary Care network by accessing all primary care patients in the AF data store. The investigators estimate this will entail roughly 4,700 patients. The investigators will run the AFDST on all of these patients and compare current antithrombotic therapy with treatment recommended by the AFDST to ascertain the proportion of this cohort that is receiving recommended antithrombotic therapy. This will give us an updated estimate of the care gap, and the potential for improving outcomes through this intervention.

When a clinician is in the chart of an AF patient, the AFDST will run in the background and determine whether the patient would gain more than 0.5 QALYs were their current thromboprophylaxis changed. Depending upon whether the patient is in the usual care or active intervention study arm, either a hidden best practice advisory or an actual best practice advisory will be triggered. This will automatically enroll the patient into the study, and this visit will be noted as their index visit.

If for any reason, we are not able to implement full functionality of the plan described above, we will proceed with the following more manual alternative plan. At the end of each week, we will generate a report of all patients in our AF data mart who have had either a primary care visit with one of our GIM attendings or UC Health primary care physicians. We will run the AFDST for each of these patients to see if they would gain an estimated benefit greater than 0.5 QALYs were their current thromboprophylaxis changed. Those patients will be enrolled in the study, and this visit will be noted as their index visit. In addition, the PI, project manager, and study nurses will receive an Epic alert whenever any enrolled patient has an Emergency Department visit or is hospitalized at UCMC. We will use this alert as a trigger to review those patients' charts to assess for the occurrence of any adverse events (AE). This information will be captured on the case report forms. Outcomes for specific aim 2 will be determined at the end of the study.

C.4.4. Sample Size Calculations for Primary Outcome - All sample size estimates assume 90% power in a two-tailed, alpha = .05 significance test. For the AFDST group (current state) we assume, based on similar past assessments, that no more than 4% of patients with "non-optimal" treatment will be switched to "appropriate thromboprophylaxis" as determined by the AFDST. Given that 4% rate, detecting a 10% rate of change to "appropriate thromboprophylaxis" in the group also receiving BPAs would require 397 independently sampled patients in each group. Note also that we believe that the 4% estimate for the AFDST group is optimistic in that we are likely to observe a lower rate, thus lowering the rate detectable in the other group.

C.4.5. Clinical Significance of Estimated Changes in "Appropriate Thromboprophylaxis" - Given the current 2.2 million patients in the United States with AF, if the investigators are successful in demonstrating a 10% improvement in appropriate thromboprophylaxis, the broad implementation of AF decision support with BPAs could result in improved treatment for more than 44,000 patients, and a population gain of more than 22,000 QALYs. Similarly, an 18% improvement through the addition of AF Shared Decision-Making services, could improve treatment for almost 80,000 patients, with a population gain of almost 40,000 QALYs.

C.4.6. Study Design Details for Aim 2 - Aim 2 is focused on the development and evaluation of an Atrial Fibrillation Shared Decision Making tool (AFSDM) and an AF Thromboprophylaxis Shared Decision-Making service that will use this tool to engage referred patients in a shared decision-making conversation about AF thromboprophylaxis treatment options. To accomplish these goals, the investigators propose the following specific steps:

Develop the AFSDM - In the previously described pilot/feasibility study of the AFSDM, the investigators used a software application written in Visual Basic®, the Gambler® (developed by the PI and a past fellow in 1992) to assess patient values and preferences using the Standard Gamble technique.(35) This needs to be re-programmed and integrated into the AFSDM using a contemporary web-based language. The AFSDM integrates processes of - 1) utility assessment for health states (major gastrointestinal bleed, as an exemplar for major extracranial bleeding events, stroke with minor and with major long-term neurological sequelae, and taking a medication [warfarin] that requires monthly or bimonthly medical visits to check INRs and dosing adjustments); 2) patient and family education regarding the risks and benefits of treatment; 3) performance of patient-specific decision analyses; and 4) real-time communication of results. The investigators will perform utility assessments for relevant health states using the standard gamble technique.(35) This is a validated method commonly used to assess patients' values and preferences for health outcomes in decision analyses. It is particularly appropriate for choices that entail risk, as risk attitude is incorporated holistically in utility assessments using this technique. The investigators will develop software to computerize these assessments and seamlessly integrate them with the decision support tool. The investigators will include educational materials for use by the shared decision-making service to inform patients better about AF-related stroke risk, available treatments and the risks and benefits of those treatments. In addition, the investigators anticipate that, for many patients, the decision analytic results will not favor a clear best treatment recommendation among the various DOACs, as they have similar efficacies and risks. As shown in the report for a hypothetical patient in Figure 1, quality-adjusted life expectancy for apixaban dabigatran, rivaroxaban, and edoxaban fall within 0.1 QALYs of each other. From a decision analytic perspective, they are all reasonable choices. Therefore, the best choice for this patient will also need to account for more nuanced considerations. Based on previous work by the investigative team assessing factors that patients feel are important in decision-making beyond treatment efficacy and side effects, these include - out of pocket cost, frequency of administration (e.g., daily or twice daily), availability of reversal agents, need to take with food, complexity of food-drug or drug-drug interactions, and need to have blood work done on a recurring basis (e.g., once or twice-monthly visits for INR). Figure 2 shows the type of customized information that will be provided to support discussion of these more nuanced issues. Although relative costs are shown in the placards above, the investigators plan to get specific information for each patient's out of pocket cost for these agents depending upon their insurance plan, coverage, and pharmacy.

Educational Materials for Patients Embedded in the AFSDM - Utilizing the overall structure and internal logic of the earlier computerized utility assessment tool, the "Gambler," the investigators will develop a new generation tool that makes use of current web-based client-server programming advances and multi-media technology.(49) In shared decision-making visits, using the AFSDM, utility assessments will be done for four health states/clinical outcomes: life while receiving anticoagulant therapy with warfarin, mild stroke, severe stroke, and major gastrointestinal bleed. The investigators will provide health state descriptions through a variety of user-selected formats, including text and multimedia. The investigators will film media clips for each of these health states, using professional patients or actual patients who have agreed to be filmed. Standard scenario descriptions will include the impact of the health state on their physical performance, life style and role functioning. In prior patient focus groups, patients have told us they prefer receiving information from patients of similar ethnicity, gender, and relative age to themselves. Thus, the investigators will develop a library of multimedia clips so that a patient will automatically receive health state scenario descriptions and clinical information from a patient of the same gender, race, and age range (within limits). The investigators will also provide the opportunity for additional, self-directed patient education, providing web-links to an array of sites they can access from home, or their local library, including the AHA's AFib Town, among others.

Develop and implement the AF Thromboprophylaxis Shared Decision-Making services - Across the nation, Anticoagulation Clinics (so-called "coumadin clinics") are searching for new business models, as patients transition away from warfarin to treatment with DOACs. These pharmacist-staffed clinics are ideal for engaging patients in shared decision-making. Their expertise will also address increasing concerns about inappropriate usage and dosing of DOACs. Implementation will require the development of sustainable business models; education of Anticoagulation Clinic professional staff in use of the AFSDM; and outreach to clinicians about the availability of these services.

C.4.7. Health Disparities - To address health disparities for Black patients and other vulnerable populations that result in lower rates of anticoagulation therapy, the proposal intervenes at multiple points along the continuum of prevention and care. First, the investigators will implement interventions at multiple practice sites that provide care for vulnerable populations in the health care system. The next major gap relates to patient-specific factors. The investigators will be inclusive and mindful of economic, educational, access and other barriers to treatment among Black patients and other underrepresented minorities. For example, the investigators will provide descriptions of health states for which they are obtaining patient values and preferences using a bank of audio/video clips they create using professional patients matched to patient's race, gender and age. Shared decision-making discussions also will focus on issues such as how often lab testing must be done with each medication. The need to travel to clinic once or twice a month, as is the case when warfarin is prescribed, may not be feasible for someone who has a 3-hour bus ride to see the doctor. Another topic of discussion is dietary restrictions. Due to their high vitamin K content, green, leafy vegetables, such as kale and collards, may interfere with the effectiveness of warfarin, but not the DOACs. Out-of-pocket cost and availability of adequate health insurance may also drive decisions towards or away from specific treatments. Attention to these details will enhance the effectiveness of interventions for all patient populations.

C.4.9. Sample Size Calculations for Impact of Shared Decision-Making Consultation on Decisional Conflict - The investigators will offer enrollment to patients referred to these services in a study evaluating their experience with the shared decision-making visit. The following numbers are based upon a conservative enrollment rate of 30%, (120 of 400 patients in that group) and shows the minimal point change in decisional conflict the investigators would be able to detect, using paired t-tests for pre vs post, a two-tailed alpha = .05, and 90% power. In preliminary studies, the average score for decisional conflict prior to the visit was 31 (100-point scale), post-visit mean was 9. Mean change was 22.3 (95% CI, 17.2 - 27.3) with a standard deviation of the change of 20. With those parameters the investigators could detect a mean improvement in decisional conflict as small as 6.0 points, slightly more than a minimally important change (33), but much smaller than the mean change of 22.3 seen in preliminary work. The stated numbers do not account for the effects of covariates, which would increase power slightly, or of clustering, which would reduce power slightly.

C.4.10. Data Analysis Plans - Data will be stored in the UC Secure Data Center using Microsoft SQL™ and managed by the Center for Health Informatics. The investigators will create SAS data files as necessary for statistical analyses using unique coded patient identifiers. The major outcome of interest is "appropriate thromboprophylaxis". The investigators will assess overall rates of "appropriate thromboprophylaxis" in each study arm, along with change rates following advisories and shared decision-making consultations for "non-optimal" thromboprophylaxis following each intervention. The investigators realize that the active intervention consists of a bundle that includes both a BPA and the option to refer the patient to a Shared Decision-Making service. The investigators first will analyze differences in "appropriate thromboprophylaxis" between the two study arms, regardless of whether physicians ordered a consultation or not. The investigators will perform exploratory analyses comparing "appropriate thromboprophylaxis" between study arm one (AFDST alone) and those in study arm two who did or did not get referred for a Shared Decision-Making consultation, to better understand the incremental benefit of the consult service over and above the BPA added to the decision support tool. The investigators realize there may not be sufficient power for these exploratory analyses to provide definitive results.

All hypotheses will be addressed by modeling continuous measures (such as the decisional conflict scale) or rates (such as appropriate thromboprophylaxis), to compare groups, and the effects of groups and/or covariates. In the simplest cases, these can be t-tests, chi-square tests of independent proportions, or McNemar tests. The addition of patient-level covariates (e.g., gender, age, race, health literacy, numeracy, CHA2DS2VASc and HASBLED scores) or physician/practice-level covariates (e.g., ambulatory or inpatient site of care, faculty physician, staff clinician, medical specialty) will be accomplished using generalized linear models. When possible the investigators will account for provider and/or clinic effects by treating them as random effects or as clusters, using a GEE approach. All such models can be estimated using SAS procedures GLM, GENMOD, MIXED, and GLIMMIX. Sample sizes permitting, the investigators will conduct secondary analyses on subgroups based on physician/practice factors and patient factors, similar to those described above as covariates. Alpha for each test will be a two-tailed 0.05, unadjusted for multiple tests. The investigators will perform simple descriptive analyses of clinical outcomes, such as stroke or bleeding. However, the investigators do not expect that differences in event rates following sequential interventions will be large enough to demonstrate statistically significant differences in clinical outcomes.

The investigators recognize that the behavior of the clinicians is critical to assessing the outcome of this project. Each clinical practice has its own culture through which interventions will be filtered prior to any changes in practice. Drs. Kues, Arduser, and Costanzo will assess the implementation of practice changes and physicians' experiences using the AFDST through the various EHR interventions via semi-structured interviews with key practice personnel and observations. Interviews will be audio recorded, coded and analyzed using Nvivo®, a qualitative software analysis program. Research questions the investigators will address through qualitative analyses include clinicians' perceptions regarding: 1) ease of AFDST use and workflow integration, 2) usefulness of AFDST in patient care, 3) how or whether they used the AFDST to involve the patient in a shared decision-making discussion, 4) reasons for ignoring or bypassing BPAs for some of their patients, and 5) suggestions for improving either the tool or its integration into the EHR and workflow.

Study Type

Interventional

Enrollment (Actual)

608

Phase

  • Not Applicable

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Contact

Study Contact Backup

Study Locations

    • Ohio
      • Cincinnati, Ohio, United States, 45257
        • University of Cincinnati Health System

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

18 years and older (Adult, Older Adult)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Description

Inclusion Criteria:

  • • Diagnosis of non-valvular atrial fibrillation or atrial flutter (I48.x)

Exclusion Criteria:

  • • Diagnosis of valvular heart disease (mitral valve disease (I05.x), aortic valve disease (I06.x), mitral and aortic valve disease (I08.x)), presence of prosthetic heart valve (Z95.2), or presence of xenogenic heart valve (Z95.3), or presence of other heart valve replacement (Z95.4).

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

  • Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
  • Allocation: Randomized
  • Interventional Model: Parallel Assignment
  • Masking: None (Open Label)

Arms and Interventions

Participant Group / Arm
Intervention / Treatment
No Intervention: Current State
Clinicians of patients randomized to this arm will have access to the Atrial Fibrillation Decision-Support Tool (AFDST) embedded in our EHR (as they do now), but will not receive BPAs alerting them to patients who might benefit significantly from a change in anticoagulation treatment.
Experimental: AFDST with BPA
Clinicians of patients randomized to this arm will receive BPAs when they are in the medical record of an AF patient who might gain significantly from a change in anticoagulation treatment. In addition, clinicians will have the ability to refer patients to a pharmacist-staffed AF Thromboprophylaxis Shared Decision-Making Service based in our Anticoagulation Clinic.
The AFDST is a decision support tool that is embedded in our electronic health record system. Currently, this is a passive tool that requires the clinician to launch the tool if an analysis is desired. The experimental arm of this study will add a best practice advisory (BPA) that will trigger when a clinician is in the medical record of an AF patient who might gain substantial benefit (survival and quality of life) if treatment were changed from the current anticoagulation plan, which might be no anticoagulant therapy.

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
"Appropriate Thromboprophylaxis"
Time Frame: by study completion, up to 18 months
The primary outcome of interest for aim 1 is effectiveness, measured as the percent of patients with "appropriate thromboprophylaxis" based on the AFDST recommendation. If oral anticoagulant therapy is recommended, current treatment with any oral anticoagulant agent will be considered concordant with recommendations. We will assess post-intervention treatment at the completion of the study (up to 18 months) to determine the proportion of patients in each study arm receiving "appropriate thromboprophylaxis."
by study completion, up to 18 months

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Number of patients for whom BPA is generated divided by number of BPAs acknowledged by physician activation of AFDST.
Time Frame: 18 months
Reach is defined as the total number of patients for whom the BPA was acknowledged by activating the AFDST, divided by the total numbers of patients for whom advisories were generated.
18 months
Number of clinicians receiving a BPA divided by number who acknowledge the BPA by activating AFDST.
Time Frame: 18 months
Adoption is defined as the total number of clinicians who acknowledge any advisory, divided by the total number of clinicians who receive advisories. We will measure reach, adoption, and effectiveness following both implementation of BPAs and implementation of semi-automated referral orders for shared decision-making consultation. We also will collect overall usage data to see how often the AFDST is invoked both prior to and following study initiation.
18 months
Strokes
Time Frame: 18 months
Strokes resulting in hospitalization at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center.
18 months
Major bleeds
Time Frame: 18 months
Major bleeds resulting in hospitalization at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center.
18 months

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Publications and helpful links

The person responsible for entering information about the study voluntarily provides these publications. These may be about anything related to the study.

General Publications

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start (Actual)

November 18, 2020

Primary Completion (Actual)

November 30, 2022

Study Completion (Actual)

February 28, 2023

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

September 19, 2019

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

September 20, 2019

First Posted (Actual)

September 23, 2019

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (Estimate)

May 11, 2023

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

May 10, 2023

Last Verified

May 1, 2023

More Information

Terms related to this study

Plan for Individual participant data (IPD)

Plan to Share Individual Participant Data (IPD)?

NO

Drug and device information, study documents

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product

No

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product

No

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

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