Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00005350

Evaluating Strategies to Control Hypercholesterolemia

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
Sponsor
National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc. · Academic / Other
Sex
Male
Age
100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

To determine the cost-effectiveness of alternative strategies for cholesterol reduction.

Detailed description

BACKGROUND: The availability of effective treatment for hypercholesterolemia raised the hope that millions of Americans could avoid or postpone the development of heart disease. Because the interventions were potentially effective but were also costly, the cost-effectiveness of alternative approaches to detecting and treating hypercholesterolemia had become a critical issue for health policy. The study was part of a three-grant initiative, Cost-Effective Strategies of Cholesterol-Lowering, which was recommended by the Arteriosclerosis, Hypertension, and Lipid Metabolism Advisory Committee in January, 1988 and given concept clearance at the September, 1988 National Heart, Lung, and Blood Advisory Council. The Request for Applications was released in March, 1990 and awards made in April, 1991. DESIGN NARRATIVE: Assessments were made of: effects of treatment on health outcomes (symptomatic coronary heart disease, death from coronary heart disease, and mortality from all causes); costs and effectiveness of specific dietary and pharmacological interventions; effects of delays in instituting treatment; effects of changing the interval between blood cholesterol tests on the probability and duration of treatment delay; cost and health consequences of modifying screening and treatment recommendations for other risk factors, age, and gender; population implications of screening and treatment strategies. Data from the Framingham Heart Study were used to estimate the time pattern of cholesterol levels, which was fundamental to the evaluation of changing the interval between cholesterol tests. Framingham data were also used to estimate the relation of event rates to blood cholesterol levels. Several components of the analysis were validated by testing model predictions against data from the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial. The cost estimates were based on several additional sources. Individual-level cost-effectiveness estimates for several different interventions were presented along with population-level projections of the consequences of alternative strategies. The significance of altering assumptions about uncertain values, such as the long-term risks and benefits of specific medications, was tested in sensitivity analyses.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
1991-04-01
Completion
1993-01-01
First posted
2000-05-26
Last updated
2015-12-23

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00005350. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.