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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04302974

Cohort Study on Patient Outcomes, Effectiveness and Cost-effectiveness of Intervention Programmes for DM/HT Patients

Cohort Study to Investigate the Outcomes of Patients With Hypertension and/or Diabetes Mellitus and the Effectiveness and Cost-effectiveness of Structured Multi-disciplinary Intervention Programmes

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
100,000 (actual)
Sponsor
The University of Hong Kong · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Objectives: To determine the outcome trajectories of patients with hypertension (HT) and/or diabetes mellitus (DM), and evaluate the long-term effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the Risk Assessment and Management Programmes (RAMP) and other primary care services such as Patient Support Call Centre (PSCC) on reducing complications and mortality Design: Population-based cohort study Setting: Hospital Authority (HA) primary care clinics Participants: All patients aged ≥18 years with DM or HT managed in HA primary care clinics between 2006 and 2021 Main outcome measures: (1) incidence of DM/HT-related complications (cardiovascular disease, end-stage renal disease, retinopathy, neuropathy and all-cause mortality); (2) service utilization (out-patient clinics, Accident and Emergency and overnight hospitalizations); (3) Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio per complications or all-cause death avoided, and per QALY gained by RAMP or PSCC. Methods: A naturalistic cohort study (maximum 10-year follow-up) and retrospective data extraction from the HA clinical management system (CMS) database will be conducted to identify and correlate outcome trajectories of HT and/or DM patients with personal, service delivery and process of care factors. Outcomes of propensity score matched cohorts who have and have not participated in the programmes will be compared. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression and Poisson/negative binomial regression will be conducted to evaluate the effect of RAMP, PSCC and other primary care services on the risk of complications, mortality and service utilization. Empirical costs and effectiveness data will be used to calculate cost-effectiveness from the provider's perspective. Significance: Findings will inform how to optimize service delivery for HT/DM patients in Hong Kong

Detailed description

A naturalistic cohort study with a maximum follow-up period of 10 years, and retrospective extraction of relevant data from the HA clinical management system (CMS) database, designed as four sub-studies:- 1. A trajectory study on all HA primary care patients with HT and/or DM receiving care from 2006 to 2019, to explore the trajectory patterns for clinical, treatment and complication profiles and investigate the impact of multi-morbidity, continuity-of-care, different service delivery models and management strategies (including investigation frequency and specific drug regimens) on outcomes and health service utilization. 2. A 10-year effectiveness and cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) of RAMP-DM. A cohort of RAMP-DM patients will be compared against a propensity score matched cohort of 'usual care' only DM patients to determine the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of RAMP-DM on reducing complications and mortality and gain in quality adjusted life years (QALY). The optimal criteria and frequency of repeating RAMP-DM will be determined. 3. A 10-year effectiveness and CEA of RAMP-HT. A cohort of RAMP-HT will be compared against a propensity score matched cohort of 'usual care' only HT patients to determine the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of RAMP-HT on reducing complications and mortality and gain in QALY. The optimal criteria and frequency of repeating RAMP-HT will be determined 4. An evaluation on the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of PSCC. A cohort of RAMP-DM plus PSCC (RAMP-DM+PSCC) will be compared against a propensity score matched cohort of RAMP-DM only patients to evaluate the effectiveness and cost effectiveness of PSCC on the reduction of complications and mortality and gain in QALY.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREDifferent structures and processes of primary care management strategiesDifferent structures and processes of primary care management strategies includes: Multi-morbidity, continuity-of-care, different service delivery models and management strategies (i.e. investigation frequency and specific drug regimens)
PROCEDUREMulti-disciplinary Risk Factor Assessment and Management Programmes for diabetes (RAMP-DM)Under the Multi-disciplinary Risk Factor Assessment and Management Programmes (RAMP) for diabetes (RAMP-DM), multi-disciplinary teams of health care professionals (doctors, nurses, dietitians, pharmacists, opticians etc) were established at designated GOPCs. All DM patients are eligible to enrol into the DM RAMP programmes. Each patient in the RAMP receives a comprehensive risk factor and complication screening to determine his/her overall cardiovascular risk and presence of modifiable risk factors, and according to their risk level and need, the patient may receive additional interventions such as additional counselling by the nurse or additional consultations with a senior doctor.
PROCEDUREMulti-disciplinary Risk Factor Assessment and Management Programmes for hypertension (RAMP-HT)Under the Multi-disciplinary Risk Factor Assessment and Management Programmes (RAMP) for hypertension (RAMP-HT), multi-disciplinary teams of health care professionals (doctors, nurses, dietitians, pharmacists, opticians etc) were established at designated GOPCs. All HT patients are eligible to enrol into the HT RAMP programmes. Each patient in the RAMP receives a comprehensive risk factor and complication screening to determine his/her overall cardiovascular risk and presence of modifiable risk factors, and according to their risk level and need, the patient may receive additional interventions such as additional counselling by the nurse or additional consultations with a senior doctor.
PROCEDUREPatient Support Call Centre (PSCC)RAMP Patients can also be referred to the Patient Empowerment Programme(PEP) - a structured self-care education programme delivered by non-governmental organisations(NGOs). If the DM control is suboptimal but the patient is unable to attend the PEP, they may be referred to the Patient Support Call Centre(PSCC) service. PSCC provides individualized telephone counselling by trained nurses. PSCC empowers high-risk DM patients to engage in self-care behaviours by providing regular protocol-led telephone support to advise and reinforce healthy behaviours. Targeted self-care behaviours include self-monitoring, medication management, balanced diet, exercise, risk factor reduction, problem solving and healthy coping. Enrolled patients receive weekly to bi-weekly calls in the first 3 months and additional calls as required for a maximum of 9 months. Subsequent follow-up calls are undertaken to assess self-care behaviours related to the selected goals and to develop a care plan with the patient.

Timeline

Start date
2019-08-01
Primary completion
2024-06-30
Completion
2024-09-30
First posted
2020-03-10
Last updated
2024-12-10

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04302974. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.