Trials / Completed
CompletedNCT04266834
Establishing Clinical Utility of a New Diagnostic Test in Patients Undergoing Cardiac Catheterization
Establishing Clinical Utility of a New Diagnostic Test in Patients Undergoing Cardiac Catheterization: A CPV® Randomized Controlled Trial
- Status
- Completed
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 157 (actual)
- Sponsor
- Qure Healthcare, LLC · Industry
- Sex
- All
- Age
- —
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
This study will collect high-quality randomized controlled data across the U.S. from practicing cardiologists performing invasive/interventional procedures and determine how they currently manage patients at risk for CIN and how the results of Hikari's L-FABP test change clinical decision making.
Detailed description
This study will collect high-quality randomized controlled data across the U.S. from practicing cardiologists performing invasive/interventional procedures and determine how they currently manage patients at risk for CIN and how the results of Hikari's L-FABP test change clinical decision making. Data from this study will better illuminate the clinical use cases with the most significant impact on clinical decision making (and thus the largest potential clinical utility) and the associated physician characteristics (e.g., age, practice setting, training) associated with test adoption. This study leverages simulated patient cases called Clinical Performance and Value vignettes (CPVs) in a proven methodology to rapidly measure physician care decisions. CPVs are a unique and scalable tool that standardizes practice measurement by having all providers care for the same (virtual) patients. With all providers caring for the same patients, the CPVs generate unbiased data that yields powerful insights into clinical decision making and how these decisions change with the introduction of a new product or solution. Data from the CPVs can quickly demonstrate the clinical utility of a solution, be published in peer-reviewed literature, inform marketing strategies and positively impact coverage and reimbursement decisions. The study is a prospective cohort trial with six steps: 1. Enrollment: The study will enroll 166 practicing cardiologists who perform invasive or interventional procedures in the U.S. and are determined to be eligible by an eligibility screener. 2. Provider survey: Once providers are enrolled in the study, they will be asked to complete a questionnaire describing their practice and professional background. 3. Randomization: The 166 cardiologists will be randomized into equally-sized (83) control and intervention arms. 4. CPVs (First Round): Physicians will complete three randomly-assigned CPV patient simulations in random order. Cases will be identical across the intervention and control arms. All cases are presented on an online platform, participants are provided with unique weblinks, accessible via any internet-connected computer. 5. Education: The intervention-arm cardiologists will receive educational materials duplicating what physicians would receive in the real-world market as they adopt the L-FABP test. These materials may be comprised of a slide deck, fact sheet, webinar, or case studies. 6. CPVs: Physicians will then complete three additional CPV patient simulations in random order. Cases will be identical across the intervention and control arms, except that the intervention arm will receive L-FABP test results at an appropriate point in each simulated case in the post-intervention round.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| OTHER | Experimental Arm | First, these providers will receive educational materials (e.g. a slide deck and one-page fact sheet) meant to mimic what physicians will receive in the real-world market as they learn about the Hikari DX L-FABP test. Second, within each of their second-round cases, intervention-arm physicians only will receive simulated test results from the L-FABP test at the clinically-appropriate point in each case. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2019-12-01
- Primary completion
- 2020-06-01
- Completion
- 2020-06-30
- First posted
- 2020-02-12
- Last updated
- 2020-09-16
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04266834. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.