Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04188457

Medical-economic Evaluation Comparing Intensive Outpatient Monitoring of Neuro-cardiovascular Diseases by Nurses, Doctors and Hospital and Private-sector Pharmacists, Compared to Usual Monitoring.

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
859 (actual)
Sponsor
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Dijon · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Cerebral Vascular Accidents (stroke) and Myocardial Infarction (MI), which share the same risk factors, treatments and pathophysiological mechanisms, have become two major public health problems due to the increase in their prevalence rate and the longer survival after such an event in developed countries. International data, including French data and data from our own registries, illustrate that: * risk factors that are common, mainly hypertension, smoking, high cholesterol or diabetes, remain insufficiently controlled, although they are easily detectable and treatable; * the incidence rate of stroke has doubled in 20 years in people under 55 years of age, increasing the number of people with chronic disabilities; * 1-month and 1-year mortality rates for stroke and MIs have decreased by 17% in 5 years, increasing the number of survivors but with chronic disabilities; * the aging of the population and the arrival of the baby boomers of the 1950s in the at-risk age groups has increased the at-risk population; * Stroke and MI recurrence rates reached a threshold of 6% / year, in contrast to the very high rates of re-hospitalization at 1 year: 30% post-stroke and 20% post-MI, due to poorly anticipated and controlled complications. These reasons explain the lack of significant progress in preventing recurrences, preventable complications (heart failure and arrhythmias after MI; falls, sphincter and swallowing disorders, dementia and arrhythmias after stroke) and re-admission. This observation is aggravated by problems of medical demography and therefore the availability of neurologists, cardiologists and general practitioners. Local and foreign experiments have demonstrated the value of intensive, coordinated and multi-professional stroke and MI monitoring, including nurses, in terms of: better control of risk factors and reduction of the rate of re-hospitalization by recurrence in stroke follow-up; improvement of the patient's general condition, control of risk factors, reduction in the number of events, decrease in the number of re-hospitalizations and their duration in MI follow-up. The value of pharmacists' additional intervention in intensive post-MI follow-up compared to routine follow-up has also been demonstrated, particularly in terms of significant improvement in patient compliance. The hypothesis is that 2 years of intensive follow-up for both post-stroke or post-MI patients, by trained hospital and liberal nurses, in conjunction with doctors and pharmacists, is of medico-economic interest compared to usual follow-up. Therefore a medico-economic evaluation was designed to evaluate the efficiency of this model, which combines community-based and recourse care, prevention and coordination of care compared to usual follow-up.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERUsual follow-up2 medical consultations (nurse and doctor) over 24 months
OTHERIntensive follow-up10 medical visits (nurse, doctor, pharmacist) over 24 months

Timeline

Start date
2020-10-15
Primary completion
2025-10-09
Completion
2025-10-09
First posted
2019-12-06
Last updated
2025-12-30

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04188457. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.