Leveraging electronic health records to streamline the conduct of cardiovascular clinical trials

Author:

Khan Muhammad Shahzeb1ORCID,Usman Muhammad Shariq2,Talha Khawaja M2,Van Spall Harriette G C345,Greene Stephen J16,Vaduganathan Muthiah7,Khan Sadiya S8,Mills Nicholas L910,Ali Ziad A11,Mentz Robert J16,Fonarow Gregg C12,Rao Sunil V13,Spertus John A1415,Roe Matthew T16,Anker Stefan D16,James Stefan K17,Butler Javed218,McGuire Darren K19

Affiliation:

1. Division of Cardiology, Duke University School of Medicine , 2301 Erwin Rd., Durham, NC 27705 , USA

2. Department of Medicine, University of Mississippi Medical Center , 2500 N State St, Jackson, MS 39216 , USA

3. Department of Medicine, McMaster University , Hamilton, ON , Canada

4. Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact, McMaster University , Hamilton, ON , Canada

5. Population Health Research Institute , Hamilton, ON , Canada

6. Duke Clinical Research Institute , Durham, NC , USA

7. Cardiovascular Division, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School , Boston, MA , USA

8. Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine , Chicago, IL, USA

9. BHF Centre for Cardiovascular Science, University of Edinburgh, Chancellors Building, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh , Edinburgh, Scotland , UK

10. Usher Institute, University of Edinburgh , Edinburgh, Scotland , UK

11. DeMatteis Cardiovascular Institute, St Francis Hospital and Heart Center , Roslyn, NY , USA

12. Division of Cardiology, University of California Los Angeles , Los Angeles, CA , USA

13. Division of Cardiology, New York University Langone Health System , New York, NY , USA

14. Department of Cardiology, Saint Luke’s Mid America Heart Institute , Kansas City, MO , USA

15. Kansas City’s Healthcare Institute for Innovations in Quality, University of Missouri , Kansas, MO , USA

16. Department of Cardiology (CVK), Berlin Institute of Health Center for Regenerative Therapies (BCRT), and German Centre for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK) Partner Site Berlin, Charité Universitätsmedizin , Berlin , Germany

17. Department of Medical Sciences, Scientific Director UCR, Uppsala University , Uppsala, Uppland , Sweden

18. Baylor Scott & White Research Institute , Dallas, TX , USA

19. Division of Cardiology, Department of Internal Medicine, UT Southwestern Medical Center and Parkland Health and Hospital System , Dallas, TX , USA

Abstract

Abstract Conventional randomized controlled trials (RCTs) can be expensive, time intensive, and complex to conduct. Trial recruitment, participation, and data collection can burden participants and research personnel. In the past two decades, there have been rapid technological advances and an exponential growth in digitized healthcare data. Embedding RCTs, including cardiovascular outcome trials, into electronic health record systems or registries may streamline screening, consent, randomization, follow-up visits, and outcome adjudication. Moreover, wearable sensors (i.e. health and fitness trackers) provide an opportunity to collect data on cardiovascular health and risk factors in unprecedented detail and scale, while growing internet connectivity supports the collection of patient-reported outcomes. There is a pressing need to develop robust mechanisms that facilitate data capture from diverse databases and guidance to standardize data definitions. Importantly, the data collection infrastructure should be reusable to support multiple cardiovascular RCTs over time. Systems, processes, and policies will need to have sufficient flexibility to allow interoperability between different sources of data acquisition. Clinical research guidelines, ethics oversight, and regulatory requirements also need to evolve. This review highlights recent progress towards the use of routinely generated data to conduct RCTs and discusses potential solutions for ongoing barriers. There is a particular focus on methods to utilize routinely generated data for trials while complying with regional data protection laws. The discussion is supported with examples of cardiovascular outcome trials that have successfully leveraged the electronic health record, web-enabled devices or administrative databases to conduct randomized trials.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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