Interventions for Optimization of Guideline-Directed Medical Therapy

Author:

Tang Amber B.1,Brownell Nicholas K.2,Roberts Jacob S.1,Haidar Amier1,Osuna-Garcia Antonia3,Cho David J.2,Bokhoor Pooya2,Fonarow Gregg C.24

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles

2. Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, University of California Los Angeles

3. Louise M. Darling Biomedical Library, UCLA Library, University of California Los Angeles

4. Associate Section Editor, JAMA Cardiology

Abstract

ImportanceImplementation of guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) in real-world practice remains suboptimal. It is unclear which interventions are most effective at addressing current barriers to GDMT in patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF).ObjectiveTo perform a systematic review to identify which types of system-level initiatives are most effective at improving GDMT use among patients with HFrEF.Evidence ReviewPubMed, Embase, Cochrane, CINAHL, and Web of Science databases were queried from January 2010 to November 2023 for randomized clinical trials that implemented a quality improvement intervention with GDMT use as a primary or secondary outcome. References from related review articles were also included for screening. Quality of studies and bias assessment were graded based on the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool and Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine.FindingsTwenty-eight randomized clinical trials were included with an aggregate sample size of 19 840 patients. Studies were broadly categorized as interdisciplinary interventions (n = 15), clinician education (n = 5), electronic health record initiatives (n = 6), or patient education (n = 2). Overall, interdisciplinary titration clinics were associated with significant increases in the proportion of patients on target doses of GDMT with a 10% to 60% and 2% to 53% greater proportion of patients on target doses of β-blockers and renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors, respectively, in intervention groups compared with usual care. Other interventions, such as audits, clinician and patient education, or electronic health record alerts, were also associated with some improvements in GDMT utilization, though these findings were inconsistent across studies.Conclusions and RelevanceThis review summarizes interventions aimed at optimization of GDMT in clinical practice. Initiatives that used interdisciplinary teams, largely comprised of nurses and pharmacists, most consistently led to improvements in GDMT. Additional large, randomized studies are necessary to better understand other types of interventions, as well as their long-term efficacy and sustainability.

Publisher

American Medical Association (AMA)

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