Got Mail? Letter-Based Intervention Doesn’t Boost OAC Initiation for A-fib – TCTMD

Posted: Published on September 3rd, 2020

This post was added by Alex Diaz-Granados

A single educational mailing to patients with A-fib and their doctors is not enough to increase uptake of oral anticoagulation for stroke prevention, results of the IMPACT-AFib trial show.

Only about one in every 10 patients who were not already taking an oral anticoagulant filled a prescription for one within the first year, with no significant difference between the intervention and control groups, Sean Pokorney, MD, MBA (Duke Clinical Research Institute, Durham, NC), reported during the virtual European Society of Cardiology Congress 2020.

He noted, however, that numerically more patients initiated an oral anticoagulant early after mailing, raising questions of whether multiple mailings or further contact may have been beneficial.

Indeed, a prior trial from the Duke researchersIMPACT-AFshowed that a more-comprehensive intervention that involved education of patients and physicians, monitoring, and feedback increased use of oral anticoagulation compared with usual care and appeared to reduce the risk of stroke (although the study was not powered to look at this).

A question after that trial, Pokorney told TCTMD, was whether a simpler, lower-intensity intervention also could bump up oral anticoagulation use, which continues to be suboptimal in clinical practice.

The mail-based intervention evaluated in this new study is the type of thing that insurance companies are already doing, Pokorney said. Going forward, I think that were going to need more-intensive interventions: were going to need to make sure that weve truly reached our patients, were going to need repeat contact with patients and providers to highlight issues and make sure that we effect change, and were going to need measurement and feedbackespecially on the provider sideto allow them to understand that change is really happening.

IMPACT-AFib

The IMPACT-AFib trial was conducted through the FDA-Catalyst initiative, which leverages data from the agencys Sentinel system for monitoring the safety of approved medical devices. Through that public-private partnership, the US Food and Drug Administration sends queries to participating insurance companies, which then comb through their claims information and return aggregate data sets that can be used to answer research questions.

IMPACT-AFib is the first randomized trial to be performed within the FDA-Catalyst network. The participating insurance companies (data partners) identified eligible patients and physicians, distributed the educational mailings, ran queries, and provided aggregate data for analysis. Researchers at Harvard University took those aggregate data, masked them, and sent them on to Duke for meta-analysis.

For patients, the intervention included a single mailing that identified them as someone with A-fib who was not on oral anticoagulation and included information on risks of A-fib and related stroke and on the benefits and risks of oral anticoagulation. Patients also received a card they could take to start a conversation with their doctor, with the aim of making them agents of change, Pokorney said.

Doctors received a letter explaining that their patient was being enrolled in the trial; educational materials on stroke prevention in patients with A-fib; and a mailer that they could send to the insurance companies to explain their rationale for not using oral anticoagulation in their untreated patients.

Pokorney presented an analysis of 47,333 patients (mean age 78 years; 47% women), all with a CHA2DS2-VASc score of at least 2, who were not taking oral anticoagulation at baseline. They were randomized to the intervention or control; in the control group, patients and doctors received the mailing a year after it was sent to the intervention group. Overall, patients had a high risk of stroke (mean CHA2DS2-VASc of 4.5) and bleeding, with 47% having an ATRIA score of 5 or higher and 19% having a history of hospitalization for bleeding.

The primary outcome was the proportion of patients who filled a prescription for oral anticoagulation in the first year, which did not differ between the intervention and control groups (9.89% vs 9.80%; adjusted OR 1.01; 95% CI 0.95-1.07). Although there was a small numerical difference favoring the intervention early after the mailing was sent out, it attenuated over time.

There were no between-group differences in clinical outcomes, including stroke, systemic embolism, bleeding, and in-hospital death.

Repetition, Multidisciplinary Approach Needed

Serving as a discussant after Pokorneys presentation, Christophe Leclercq, MD, PhD (Rennes University Hospital, France), highlighted the aspects of the prior IMPACT-AF trial, noting that the educational intervention involved both patients and their relatives and included brochures, web-based and video materials, encouragement of patient and relative interaction with doctors, and systematic and repeated education of healthcare professionals. Importantly, he said, monitoring and feedback to coordinating centers allowed for additional interventions in nonadherent patients.

First, I think that we can conclude that one single [mailing] to patients without . . . repetition has no benefit at 1 year follow-up for the use of oral anticoagulants, Leclercq said, adding that he thinks the material used in IMPACT-AFib was more focused on the risks of oral anticoagulation rather than the benefits.

In addition, he said, I think that we can conclude that education seems more efficient with a repeated process with a multidisciplinary approach.

Asked what could be done to improve on the results seen in IMPACT-AFib, Pokorney pointed to the approach used in the IMPACT-AF trial. There was this monitoring and feedback loop, and I think that thats really critical to have monitoring and feedback as well as repeated interactions with patients, he said.

More-modern interventions and contact with patients may be ways to raise the bar and increase the use of anticoagulation and try to meet the guidelines, as well as [to provide] measurement and feedback loops. Sean Pokorney

In addition, sending printed material through the mail may not be the best way to reach patients, he said. The researchers did not have access to email addresses or mobile numbers for patients through the FDA-Catalyst network. Those types of more-modern interventions and contact with patients may be ways to raise the bar and increase the use of anticoagulation and try to meet the guidelines, as well as [to provide] measurement and feedback loops.

One of the important lessons from this effort, Pokorney told TCTMD, is that its not easy to effect change, and theres a reason that medical therapies across medicineincluding anticoagulation for A-fibare underused. This has shown, really, that very-low-intensity interventions are not going to be sufficient and we need to really be more comprehensive, especially including measurement and feedback, as we do implementation work.

Future trials evaluating more-intensive interventions are still in the planning stages, but a second important take-away from IMPACT-AFib, Pokorney said, is that it is feasible to perform a pragmatic trial, identify and randomize patients, and complete follow-up through the FDA-Catalyst network.

Doing more pragmatic trials designs really opens up opportunities for us to answer questions more efficiently, more frequently, and definitely with less cost, he said.

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Got Mail? Letter-Based Intervention Doesn't Boost OAC Initiation for A-fib - TCTMD

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