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Guidelines for Drug Therapy of Hypertension: Multi-Site Implementation
This study has been completed.
Sponsored by: Department of Veterans Affairs
Information provided by: Department of Veterans Affairs
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00122161
  Purpose

Clinical trial of implementation of clinical practice guidelines for managing hypertension in primary care clinics.


Condition Intervention Phase
Hypertension
Behavioral: ATHENA Decision Support System, An Automated Clinical Decision Support System for Health Care Providers
Behavioral: Profiling performance
Phase III

MedlinePlus related topics: High Blood Pressure
U.S. FDA Resources
Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Randomized, Open Label, Active Control, Parallel Assignment, Efficacy Study
Official Title: Guidelines for Drug Therapy of Hypertension: Multi-Site Implementation

Further study details as provided by Department of Veterans Affairs:

Primary Outcome Measures:
  • Primary care clinicians adherence to hypertension guidelines and blood pressure control in their panels of patients. [ Designated as safety issue: No ]

Estimated Enrollment: 190
Study Completion Date: September 2005
Arms Assigned Interventions
1 Behavioral: ATHENA Decision Support System, An Automated Clinical Decision Support System for Health Care Providers Behavioral: Profiling performance

Detailed Description:

Background:

Hypertension, the most commonly reported medical problem in veterans, is a major risk factor for heart disease and stroke. Lowering blood pressure decreases the risk of these adverse clinical outcomes. Widely promoted evidence-based clinical practice guidelines set target blood pressures for adequate control, yet most hypertensives, including VA patients, do not meet the targets. Guidelines also call for use of specific drugs depending on the patient's pattern of comorbid characteristics; yet, clinicians often prescribe drugs that are not guideline-concordant.

Objectives:

The long term objective of this work is to contribute to the VA's ability to respond flexibly to rapidly evolving medical knowledge by establishing a system guidelines that can be used throughout the VA nationally for implementing multiple different clinical practice. In collaboration with Stanford Medical Informatics we developed an automated decision support system for hypertension management, known as ATHENA DSS built with EON technology for guideline-based decision support. ATHENA DSS incorporates hundreds of knowledge rules to operationalize guidelines for hypertension.

Methods:

ATHENA DSS combines patient information from VistA with an automated knowledge base of hypertension to generate patient-specific recommendations for management of hypertension that are displayed to primary care clinicians in pop-up windows in the VA�s Computerized Patient Record System (CPRS) when the record for appropriate patients is opened on the day of scheduled primary care clinic visits. The ATHENA DSS pop-up provides advice on adequacy of control of blood pressure and specific recommendations for drug therapy of hypertension, a visual display of the patient�s medication history and concurrent blood pressures, evidence supporting the main recommendations, and other information. We deployed the system at three VA medical centers--Durham, San Francisco, and Palo Alto�and conducted a clinician-randomized trial. We logged data on use of the system, monitored comments entered by clinicians, and conducted a questionnaire survey of clinicians. We planned analyses of impact on clinician prescribing and patient blood pressures. We planned preparation for dissemination of the system to additional VA medical centers.

Status:

Project work is ongoing at time of preparing this report. We recently received notice of funding for a VISN collaborative that will use the ATHENA DSS in five medical centers in VISN 1 (New England).

  Eligibility

Genders Eligible for Study:   Both
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:   Yes
Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Primary care clinicians at participating study sites. That is physicians, nurse practitioners and physician assistants who have their own panel of patients to whom they provide direct patient care.

Exclusion Criteria:

  Contacts and Locations
Please refer to this study by its ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00122161

Locations
United States, California
VA Palo Alto Health Care System HSR&D COE
Palo Alto, California, United States, 94304-1207
VA Medical Center
San Francisco, California, United States, 94121
United States, North Carolina
VA Medical Center
Durham, North Carolina, United States, 27705
Sponsors and Collaborators
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Mary K. Goldstein, MD VA Palo Alto Health Care System HSR&D COE
  More Information

Click here for more information about this study: Guidelines for Drug Therapy of Hypertension: Multi-Site Implementation  This link exits the ClinicalTrials.gov site
Click here for more information about this study: Guidelines for Drug Therapy of Hypertension: Multi-Site Implementation  This link exits the ClinicalTrials.gov site

Publications of Results:
Bosworth HB, Olsen MK, Goldstein MK, Orr M, Dudley T, McCant F, Gentry P, Oddone EZ. The veterans' study to improve the control of hypertension (V-STITCH): design and methodology. Contemp Clin Trials. 2005 Apr;26(2):155-68.
Bosworth HB, Dudley T, Olsen MK, Voils CI, Powers B, Goldstein MK, Oddone EZ. Racial differences in blood pressure control: potential explanatory factors. Am J Med. 2006 Jan;119(1):70.e9-15.
Tu SW, Musen MA, Shankar R, Campbell J, Hrabak K, McClay J, Huff SM, McClure R, Parker C, Rocha R, Abarbanel R, Beard N, Glasgow J, Mansfield G, Ram P, Ye Q, Mays E, Weida T, Chute CG, McDonald K, Molu D, Nyman MA, Scheitel S, Solbrig H, Zill DA, Goldstein MK. Modeling guidelines for integration into clinical workflow. Medinfo. 2004;11(Pt 1):174-8.
Szeto HC, Coleman RK, Gholami P, Hoffman BB, Goldstein MK. Accuracy of computerized outpatient diagnoses in a Veterans Affairs general medicine clinic. Am J Manag Care. 2002 Jan;8(1):37-43.
Siegel D, Lopez J, Meier J, Goldstein MK, Lee S, Brazill BJ, Matalka MS. Academic detailing to improve antihypertensive prescribing patterns. Am J Hypertens. 2003 Jun;16(6):508-11.
Steinman MA, Fischer MA, Shlipak MG, Bosworth HB, Oddone EZ, Hoffman BB, Goldstein MK. Clinician awareness of adherence to hypertension guidelines. Am J Med. 2004 Nov 15;117(10):747-54.
Shankar RD, Tu SW, Martins SB, Fagan LM, Goldstein MK, Musen MA. Integration of textual guideline documents with formal guideline knowledge bases. Proc AMIA Symp. 2001;:617-21.
Chan AS, Coleman RW, Martins SB, Advani A, Musen MA, Bosworth HB, Oddone EZ, Shlipak MG, Hoffman BB, Goldstein MK. Evaluating provider adherence in a trial of a guideline-based decision support system for hypertension. Medinfo. 2004;11(Pt 1):125-9.
Goldstein MK, Coleman RW, Tu SW, Shankar RD, O'Connor MJ, Musen MA, Martins SB, Lavori PW, Shlipak MG, Oddone E, Advani AA, Gholami P, Hoffman BB. Translating research into practice: organizational issues in implementing automated decision support for hypertension in three medical centers. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2004 Sep-Oct;11(5):368-76. Epub 2004 Jun 7.
Advani A, Jones N, Shahar Y, Goldstein MK, Musen MA. An intelligent case-adjustment algorithm for the automated design of population-based quality auditing protocols. Medinfo. 2004;11(Pt 2):1003-7.
Shankar RD, Martins SB, Tu SW, Goldstein MK, Musen MA. Building an explanation function for a hypertension decision-support system. Medinfo. 2001;10(Pt 1):538-42.
Lin ND, Martins SB, Chan AS, Coleman RW, Bosworth HB, Oddone EZ, Shankar RD, Musen MA, Hoffman BB, Goldstein MK. Identifying barriers to hypertension guideline adherence using clinician feedback at the point of care. AMIA Annu Symp Proc. 2006;:494-8.
Tu SW, Hrabak KM, Campbell JR, Glasgow J, Nyman MA, McClure R, McClay J, Abarbanel R, Mansfield JG, Martins SM, Goldstein MK, Musen MA. Use of declarative statements in creating and maintaining computer-interpretable knowledge bases for guideline-based care. AMIA Annu Symp Proc. 2006;:784-8.
Martins SB, Lai S, Tu S, Shankar R, Hastings SN, Hoffman BB, Dipilla N, Goldstein MK. Offline testing of the ATHENA Hypertension decision support system knowledge base to improve the accuracy of recommendations. AMIA Annu Symp Proc. 2006;:539-43.
Chan AS, Shankar RD, Coleman RW, Matins SB, Hoffman BB, Goldstein MK. Leveraging point-of-care clinician feedback to study barriers to guideline adherence. AMIA Annu Symp Proc. 2005;:915.
Peralta CA, Shlipak MG, Wassel-Fyr C, Bosworth H, Hoffman B, Martins S, Oddone E, Goldstein MK. Association of Antihypertensive Therapy and Diastolic Hypotension in Chronic Kidney Disease. Hypertension. 2007 Jul 30; [Epub ahead of print]

Responsible Party: Department of Veterans Affairs ( Goldstein, Mary - Principal Investigator )
Study ID Numbers: CPI 99-275
Study First Received: July 18, 2005
Last Updated: October 31, 2008
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00122161  
Health Authority: United States: Federal Government

Keywords provided by Department of Veterans Affairs:
Drug therapy
Practice guidelines
Reminder systems
Ambulatory care
Hypertension
Clinical protocols
Quality Assurance, Health Care

Study placed in the following topic categories:
Vascular Diseases
Hypertension

Additional relevant MeSH terms:
Cardiovascular Diseases

ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on January 16, 2009