Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00674375

Risk Score Alerts for Chest Pain Care

Can Risk Score Alerts Improve Office Care for Chest Pain?

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
8,000 (actual)
Sponsor
Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
30 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The evaluation of chest pain in the primary care office is a challenging problem, with many patients suffering from missed diagnoses of acute myocardial infarction and many other low risk patients receiving unnecessary evaluations. This project will provide primary care physicians evaluating patients complaining of chest pain with computerized alerts that differentiate high-risk patients from low risk patients, and provide individualized evaluation and treatment recommendations.

Detailed description

The evaluation of ambulatory patients with chest pain is a challenging and serious problem, accounting for a significant proportion of all outpatient visits. High risk patients may go undetected, resulting in missed diagnoses of acute myocardial ischemia, while low risk patients may be subject to unnecessary evaluations. To substantially improve the evaluation and treatment of outpatients with acute chest pain syndromes, new strategies need to be developed in the primary care setting to risk stratify symptomatic patients and direct appropriate care. Our prior work demonstrates that an elevated Framingham Risk Score (at least 10%) reliably identifies patients with chest pain in the primary care setting who are at high risk for acute myocardial infarction. This study will implement and evaluate electronic risk alerts to risk stratify outpatients with chest pain and present this information to primary care clinicians within the context of an electronic health record. The intervention will take place within Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates, a multispecialty integrated group practice with 140 primary care physicians caring for approximately 300,000 patients at 14 centers in eastern Massachusetts. With a randomized, controlled study design, the study has three specific aims: * To identify predictors of risk-appropriate evaluation and treatment of patients presenting to primary care offices with acute chest pain, including race and sex. * To determine whether rates of appropriate evaluation and treatment of patients with acute chest pain can be improved through the use of point-of-care electronic risk alerts that provide individual patient cardiac risk profiles and tailored evaluation and treatment recommendations to primary care clinicians. * To perform a cost analysis for the provision of electronic decision support for patients with acute chest pain. This study has important implications for determining how the treatment of outpatients with chest pain syndromes can be optimized through the innovative use of electronic decision support, while documenting the cost implications of such a strategy. This work will also provide a model for how ambulatory practices across the country can use electronic health records to present real-time patient risk information to clinicians with the goal of improving patient safety and quality, which has important implications for both acute and chronic care.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERElectronic risk alertsElectronic risk alerts within the electronic medical record system will automatically calculate a patient's Framingham Risk Score during office visits for chest pain. These alerts will recommend electrocardiogram performance and aspirin therapy for patients with Framingham Risk Score at least 10%, and will recommend against exercise stress testing for patients with a Framingham Risk Score less than 10%.

Timeline

Start date
2008-11-01
Primary completion
2010-01-01
Completion
2010-01-01
First posted
2008-05-07
Last updated
2015-03-18

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00674375. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.