Individualized Risk Communication and Outreach for Primary Cardiovascular Disease Prevention in Community Health Centers

Author:

Persell Stephen D.1,Brown Tiffany1,Lee Ji Young1,Shah Shreya1,Henley Eric1,Long Timothy1,Luther Stephanie1,Lloyd-Jones Donald M.1,Jean-Jacques Muriel1,Kandula Namratha R.1,Sanchez Thomas1,Baker David W.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Division of General Internal Medicine and Geriatrics, Department of Medicine (S.D.P., T.B., J.Y.L., S.S., M.J.-J., N.R.K., D.W.B.), Center for Primary Care Innovation, Institute for Public Health and Medicine (S.D.P., N.R.K., D.W.B.), Division of Cardiology (D.M.L.-J.), and Department of Preventive Medicine (D.M.L.-J., N.R.K.), Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL; Department of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, CA (S.S.); North Country Healthcare,...

Abstract

Background— Many eligible primary cardiovascular disease prevention candidates are not treated with statins. Electronic health record data can identify patients with increased cardiovascular disease risk. Methods and Results— We performed a pragmatic randomized controlled trial at community health centers in 2 states. Participants were men aged ≥35 years and women ≥45 years, without cardiovascular disease or diabetes mellitus, and with a 10-year risk of coronary heart disease of at least 10%. The intervention group received telephone and mailed outreach, individualized based on patients’ cardiovascular disease risk and uncontrolled risk factors, provided by lay health workers. Main outcomes included: documented discussion of medication treatment for cholesterol with a primary care clinician, receipt of statin prescription within 6 months, and low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol repeated and at least 30 mg/dL lower than baseline within 1 year. Six hundred forty-six participants (328 and 318 in the intervention and control groups, respectively) were included. At 6 months, 26.8% of intervention and 11.6% of control patients had discussed cholesterol treatment with a primary care clinician (odds ratio, 2.79; [95% confidence interval, 2.25–3.46]). Statin prescribing occurred for 10.1% in the intervention group and 6.0% in the control group (odds ratio, 1.76; [95% confidence interval, 0.90–3.45]). The cholesterol outcome did not differ, and the majority of patients did not repeat lipid levels during follow-up. Conclusions— Risk communication and lay outreach increased cholesterol treatment discussions with primary care clinicians. However, most discussions did not result in statin prescribing. For outreach to be successful, it should be combined with interventions to encourage clinicians to follow contemporary risk-based cholesterol treatment guidelines. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clincialtrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT01610609.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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