Effect of Mailing Educational Material to Patients With Atrial Fibrillation and Their Clinicians on Use of Oral Anticoagulants: A Randomized Clinical Trial
Published in JAMA Network Open, May 31, 2022
Author(s): Sean D Pokorney, Noelle M Cocoros, Hussein R Al-Khalidi, Kevin Haynes, Shuang Li, Sana M Al-Khatib, Jacqueline Corrigan-Curay, Meighan Rogers Driscoll, Sara B Calvert, Crystal Garcia, Thomas Harkins, Robert Jin, Daniel Knecht, Mark Levenson, Nancy D Lin, David Martin, Debbe McCall, Cheryl McMahill-Walraven, Vinit Nair, Lauren E Parlett, Andrew Petrone, Robert Temple, Rongmei Zhang, Yunping Zhou, Richard Platt, Christopher B Granger
DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.14321 | Pubmed ID: 35639381
Abstract
Importance: Only about half of patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) who are at increased risk for stroke are treated with an oral anticoagulant (OAC), despite guideline recommendations for their use. Educating patients with AF about prevention of stroke with OACs may enable them as agents of change to initiate OAC treatment.
Objective: To determine whether an educational intervention directed to patients and their clinicians stimulates the use of OACs in patients with AF who are not receiving OACs.
Design, setting, and participants: The Implementation of a Randomized Controlled Trial to Improve Treatment With Oral Anticoagulants in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation (IMPACT-AFib) trial was a prospective, multicenter, open-label, pragmatic randomized clinical trial conducted from September 25, 2017, to May 1, 2019, embedded in health plans that participate in the US Food and Drug Administration's Sentinel System. It used the distributed database comprising health plan members to identify eligible patients, their clinicians, and outcomes. IMPACT-AFib enrolled patients with AF, a CHA2DS2-VASc (cardiac failure or dysfunction, hypertension, age 65-74 [1 point] or ≥75 years [2 points], diabetes, and stroke, transient ischemic attack or thromboembolism [2 points]-vascular disease, and sex category [female]) score of 2 or more, no evidence of OAC prescription dispensing in the preceding 12 months, and no hospitalization-related bleeding event within the prior 6 months.
Interventions: Randomization to a single mailing of patient and/or clinician educational materials vs control.
Main outcomes and measures: Analysis was performed on a modified intention-to-treat basis. The primary end point was the proportion of patients with at least 1 OAC prescription dispensed or at least 4 international normalized ratio test results within 1 year of the intervention.
Results: Among 47 333 patients, there were 24 909 men (52.6%), the mean (SD) age was 77.9 (9.7) years, mean (SD) CHA2DS2-VASc score was 4.5 (1.7), 22 404 patients (47.3%) had an ATRIA (Anticoagulation and Risk Factors in Atrial Fibrillation) bleeding risk score of 5 or more, and 8890 patients (18.8%) had a history of hospitalization for bleeding. There were 2328 of 23 546 patients (9.9%) in the intervention group with initiation of OAC at 1 year compared with 2330 of 23 787 patients (9.8%) in the control group (adjusted OR, 1.01 [95% CI, 0.95-1.07]; P = .79).
Conclusions and relevance: Among a large population with AF with a guideline indication for OACs for stroke prevention who were randomized to a mailed educational intervention or to usual care, there was no clinically meaningful, numerical, or statistically significant difference in rates of OAC initiation. More-intensive interventions are needed to try and address the public health issue of underuse of anticoagulation for stroke prevention among patients with AF.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03259373.
Tags
Analytic: No tags set.
Data Source: No tags set.
Research Focus: No tags set.
Study Design: No tags set.
Funding Transparency
This work was possible through:
- Grant/Award
Additional details:
- Platt - FDA - HHSF22301008T : Catalyst and Broader Uses of Sentinel Infrastructure
Entry last updated (DMY): 14-12-2024.