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PATIENTS ENROLLED IN THE ACCELERATING MEDICINES PARTNERSHIP (AMP) RA/SLE NETWORK WITH ISOLATED RENAL DISEASE REPORT MINIMAL QUALITY OF LIFE IMPAIRMENT ON PROMIS-29 COMPARED TO PATIENTS WITH EXTRARENAL SYMPTOMS [Meeting Abstract]
Carlucci, P; Li, J; Gold, H T; Deonaraine, K; Fava, A; Buyon, J; James, J A; Putterman, C; Rao, D; Diamond, B; Fine, D; Monroy-Trujillo, J; Haag, K; Apruzzese, W; Michael, Belmont H; Connery, S; Payan-Schober, F; Furie, R; Berthier, C; Dall'Era, M; Cho, K; Kamen, D; Kalunian, K; Anolik, J; Serrate-Sztein, S; Izmirly, P; Petri, M
Background Lupus nephritis can occur as an isolated component of disease activity or be accompanied by diverse extrarenal symptoms that can adversely affect a patient's quality of life (QOL). Whether renal disease absent other activity is sufficient to decrease QOL is unknown. A lack of reported QOL impairment may place patients at risk for delayed diagnosis of nephritis or medication noncompliance yet nephritis trials have largely neglected QOL. As such, this study leveraged the multi-center multi-racial Accelerating Medicines Partnership (AMP) lupus nephritis cohort to assess QOL measured by PROMIS-29. Methods Patients (n=182) fulfilling ACR or SLICC criteria for SLE with a uPCR >= .5 and biopsy Class III, IV, V, or mixed were consecutively enrolled in AMP at the time of renal biopsy and clinical history, PROMIS-29, and disease activity as assessed by the hybrid SELENA-SLEDAI were recorded. Patients were determined to have extrarenal clinical activity if, after excluding all laboratory parameters from the SLEDAI, the score remained >= 1. Raw PROMIS-29 scores were transformed to t-scores with the mean of 50 +/- 10 representing the US population and a difference of 5 points considered clinically meaningful. PROMIS-29 physical and mental health summary scores were calculated according to published formulas. Results Forty-three percent of patients (n=78) had extrarenal clinical manifestations including vasculitis (4%), arthritis (39%), rash (45%), alopecia (42%), mucosal ulcers (13%), pleurisy (12%), pericarditis (8%), and fever (4%). Patients with isolated renal disease (n=104, 57%) did not have PROMIS-29 scores that differed clinically from the US population whereas patients with extrarenal disease reported deficits in physical functioning, fatigue, social functioning, and pain (table 1). Patients with extrarenal disease had significantly lower physical health summary scores compared to patients with isolated disease (median [IQR]: 40.31 [35.79, 47.02] p<0.001 vs. 48.6 [40.14, 57.08]) and significantly lower mental health summary scores (44.12 [38.63, 51.39], p=0.024 vs. 48.67 [40.51, 55.07]). Female and African American patients and those with nephrotic range proteinuria or undergoing first biopsy had significantly lower physical health summary scores, but mental health summary scores did not differ by these variables. Patients on greater than 20 mg of prednisone had both significantly lower physical and mental health summary scores compared to those on lower doses. PROMIS-29 scores did not differ by low complements, anti-dsDNA, or anti-Ro antibodies. Stepwise multivariable linear regression analysis demonstrated that the association between extrarenal disease and lower PROMIS-29 summary scores was primarily driven by arthritis and independent of potential confounders (tables 2 and 3). Conclusion The majority of patients had isolated renal disease and report a QOL similar to that of the general population. In contrast, those with extrarenal manifestations report significantly worse QOL outcomes. These results reinforce the critical importance of routine laboratory surveillance and medication compliance for nephritis even in patients with seemingly quiescent clinical disease since lupus nephritis is often asymptomatic
EMBASE:640015967
ISSN: 2053-8790
CID: 5513562
A comparative analysis of outcomes of root canal therapy for pediatric medicaid beneficiaries from New York State
Burns, Lorel E; Gencerliler, Nihan; Terlizzi, Kelly; Wu, Yinxiang; Solis-Roman, Claudia; Gold, Heather T
OBJECTIVES/UNASSIGNED:This study investigated differences in the provision of root canal therapy and outcomes in a publicly insured cohort of children and adolescents. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:New York State Medicaid administrative claims from 2006 to 2018 were analyzed. Enrollees aged 6-18 were included in the study if they had initial non-surgical root canal therapy (NSRCT), in the permanent dentition, that allowed for at least 1 year of post-treatment follow-up. Descriptive analyses, multivariable logistic regression, and multivariable Cox proportional hazard models were used to examine the association between demographic variables (gender, age, race/ethnicity, and area-based factors) and dental treatment provision and outcomes. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:Male gender was associated with having more than one initial NSRCT (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 1.06; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.02-1.10), as was rurality (aOR = 1.15; 95% CI = 1.06-1.24). Black/African American (AA) and Hispanic children were less likely than non-Hispanic white children to have multiple NSRCTs (aOR = 0.88; 95% CI = 0.83-0.93 and aOR = 0.78; 95% CI = 0.74-0.83). Being older or female conferred a lower hazard of an untoward event (aHR = 0.93; 95% CI = 0.92-0.94 and aHR = 0.86; 95% CI = 0.81-0.91). Compared to non-Hispanic white children, Hispanic and Black/AA children had a higher risk of untoward event (aHR = 1.31; 95% CI = 1.21-1.41 and aHR = 1.55; 95% CI = 1.43-1.67) while children of Asian descent had a lower incidence after initial NSRCT (aHR = 0.79; 95% CI = 0.71-0.88). CONCLUSION/UNASSIGNED:Race/ethnicity was the strongest demographic predictor of provision of initial non-surgical root canal therapy, subsequent placement of a permanent restoration and the occurrence of an untoward event after NSRCT in this cohort.
PMCID:9720667
PMID: 36479449
ISSN: 2673-4842
CID: 5383112
Implementation of a multi-level community-clinical linkage intervention to improve glycemic control among south Asian patients with uncontrolled diabetes: study protocol of the DREAM initiative
Lim, Sahnah; Wyatt, Laura C; Mammen, Shinu; Zanowiak, Jennifer M; Mohaimin, Sadia; Troxel, Andrea B; Lindau, Stacy Tessler; Gold, Heather T; Shelley, Donna; Trinh-Shevrin, Chau; Islam, Nadia S
BACKGROUND:A number of studies have identified patient-, provider-, and community-level barriers to effective diabetes management among South Asian Americans, who have a high prevalence of type 2 diabetes. However, no multi-level, integrated community health worker (CHW) models leveraging health information technology (HIT) have been developed to mitigate disease among this population. This paper describes the protocol for a multi-level, community-clinical linkage intervention to improve glycemic control among South Asians with uncontrolled diabetes. METHODS:The study includes three components: 1) building the capacity of primary care practices (PCPs) to utilize electronic health record (EHR) registries to identify patients with uncontrolled diabetes; 2) delivery of a culturally- and linguistically-adapted CHW intervention to improve diabetes self-management; and 3) HIT-enabled linkage to culturally-relevant community resources. The CHW intervention component includes a randomized controlled trial consisting of group education sessions on diabetes management, physical activity, and diet/nutrition. South Asian individuals with type 2 diabetes are recruited from 20 PCPs throughout NYC and randomized at the individual level within each PCP site. A total of 886 individuals will be randomized into treatment or control groups; EHR data collection occurs at screening, 6-, 12-, and 18-month. We hypothesize that individuals receiving the multi-level diabetes management intervention will be 15% more likely than the control group to achieve ≥0.5% point reduction in hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) at 6-months. Secondary outcomes include change in weight, body mass index, and LDL cholesterol; the increased use of community and social services; and increased health self-efficacy. Additionally, a cost-effectiveness analysis will focus on implementation and healthcare utilization costs to determine the incremental cost per person achieving an HbA1c change of ≥0.5%. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS:Final outcomes will provide evidence regarding the effectiveness of a multi-level, integrated EHR-CHW intervention, implemented in small PCP settings to promote diabetes control among an underserved South Asian population. The study leverages multisectoral partnerships, including the local health department, a healthcare payer, and EHR vendors. Study findings will have important implications for the translation of integrated evidence-based strategies to other minority communities and in under-resourced primary care settings. TRIAL REGISTRATION/BACKGROUND:This study was registered with clinicaltrials.gov: NCT03333044 on November 6, 2017.
PMCID:8609264
PMID: 34814899
ISSN: 1472-6823
CID: 5063582
Protocol: A multi-modal, physician-centered intervention to improve guideline-concordant prostate cancer imaging
Makarov, Danil V; Ciprut, Shannon; Kelly, Matthew; Walter, Dawn; Shedlin, Michele G; Braithwaite, Ronald Scott; Tenner, Craig T; Gold, Heather T; Zeliadt, Steven; Sherman, Scott E
BACKGROUND:Almost half of Veterans with localized prostate cancer receive inappropriate, wasteful staging imaging. Our team has explored the barriers and facilitators of guideline-concordant prostate cancer imaging and found that (1) patients with newly diagnosed prostate cancer have little concern for radiographic staging but rather focus on treatment and (2) physicians trust imaging guidelines but are apt to follow their own intuition, fear medico-legal consequences, and succumb to influence from imaging-avid colleagues. We used a theory-based approach to design a multi-level intervention strategy to promote guideline-concordant imaging to stage incident prostate cancer. METHODS:We designed the Prostate Cancer Imaging Stewardship (PCIS) intervention: a multi-site, stepped wedge, cluster-randomized trial to determine the effect of a physician-focused behavioral intervention on Veterans Health Administration (VHA) prostate cancer imaging use. The multi-level intervention, developed according to the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) and Behavior Change Wheel, combines traditional physician behavior change methods with novel methods of communication and data collection. The intervention consists of three components: (1) a system of audit and feedback to clinicians informing individual clinicians and their sites about how their behavior compares to their peers' and to published guidelines, (2) a program of academic detailing with the goal to educate providers about prostate cancer imaging, and (3) a CPRS Clinical Order Check for potentially guideline-discordant imaging orders. The intervention will be introduced to 10 participating geographically distributed study sites. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS:This study is a significant contribution to implementation science, providing VHA an opportunity to ensure delivery of high-quality care at the lowest cost using a theory-based approach. The study is ongoing. Preliminary data collection and recruitment have started; analysis has yet to be performed. TRIAL REGISTRATION/BACKGROUND:CliniclTrials.gov NCT03445559. Prospectively registered on February 26, 2018.
PMCID:8522153
PMID: 34663435
ISSN: 1745-6215
CID: 5037252
Clinical Trial Protocol for a Randomized Trial of Community Health Worker-led Decision Coaching to Promote Shared Decision-making on Prostate Cancer Screening Among Black Male Patients and Their Providers
Makarov, Danil V; Ciprut, Shannon; Martinez-Lopez, Natalia; Fagerlin, Angela; Thomas, Jerry; Shedlin, Michele; Gold, Heather T; Li, Huilin; Bhat, Sandeep; Warren, Rueben; Ubel, Peter; Ravenell, Joseph E
We propose a randomized controlled trial to evaluate the effectiveness of a community health worker-led decision-coaching program to facilitate shared decision-making for prostate cancer screening decisions by Black men at a primary care federally qualified health center.
PMID: 34426097
ISSN: 2405-4569
CID: 5061072
Cost and healthcare utilization analysis of culturally sensitive, shared medical appointment model for Latino children with type 1 diabetes
Gold, Heather T; Pirraglia, Elizabeth; Huang, Elbert S; Wan, Wen; Pascual, Andrea B; Jensen, Ryan James; Gonzalez, Andrea Gerard
OBJECTIVE:This study evaluated costs and healthcare utilization associated with a culturally-sensitive, medical and education program for pediatric Latino patients with type 1 diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS/METHODS:Program participants included Latino children ages 1-20 years old diagnosed with type 1 diabetes (n = 57). Control subjects with type 1 diabetes were matched by age, sex, and zip code to intervention participants from the Colorado All Payer Claims Database. Data included emergency department (ED) visits, hospitalizations, demographic information, and health insurance claims data 180 days prior to program start/index date through 1 year after program start/index date. We tracked program staff time and estimated costs for healthcare utilization using data from the scientific literature. Generalized Estimating Equation (GEE) models with logit link were used to estimate group differences in probabilities of ED visits and hospitalizations over 6-month periods pre/post-study, accounting for correlation of within-subject data across time points. Sensitivity analyses modeled longer-term cost differences under different assumptions. RESULTS:The intervention group had fewer hospitalizations, 2% versus 12% of controls (p = 0.047,OR = 0.13;95%CI: 0.02-0.97) for 6 months following start date. The intervention group had fewer ED visits, 19% versus 32% in controls (n.s.; p = 0.079,OR = 0.52;95%CI:0.25-1.08) and significantly fewer hospitalizations, 4% versus 15% of controls (p = 0.039,OR = 0.21;95%CI: 0.05-0.93) 6-12 months post-start date. One-year per-patient program costs of $633 and healthcare cost savings of $2710 yielded total per-patient savings of $2077, or a 5-year cost savings of $14,106. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:This unique type 1 diabetes management program altered health service utilization of program participants, reducing major healthcare cost drivers, ED visits, and hospitalizations.
PMID: 33909322
ISSN: 1399-5448
CID: 4868112
The cost, survival, and quality-of-life implications of guideline-discordant imaging for prostate cancer
Winn, Aaron N; Kelly, Matthew; Ciprut, Shannon; Walter, Dawn; Gold, Heather T; Zeliadt, Steven B; Sherman, Scott E; Makarov, Danil V
BACKGROUND:National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines for incident prostate cancer staging imaging have been widely circulated and accepted as best practice since 1996. Despite these clear guidelines, wasteful and potentially harmful inappropriate imaging of men with prostate cancer remains prevalent. AIM/OBJECTIVE:To understand changing population-level patterns of imaging among men with incident prostate cancer, we created a state-transition microsimulation model based on existing literature and incident prostate cancer cases. METHODS:To create a cohort of patients, we identified incident prostate cancer cases from 2004 to 2009 that were diagnosed in men ages 65 and older from SEER. A microsimulation model allowed us to explore how this cohort's survival, quality of life, and Medicare costs would be impacted by making imaging consistent with guidelines. We conducted a probabilistic analysis as well as one-way sensitivity analysis. RESULTS:When only imaging high-risk men compared to the status quo, we found that the population rate of imaging dropped from 53 to 38% and average per-person spending on imaging dropped from $236 to $157. The discounted and undiscounted incremental cost-effectiveness ratios indicated that ideal upfront imaging reduced costs and slightly improved health outcomes compared with current practice patterns, that is, guideline-concordant imaging was less costly and slightly more effective. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:This study demonstrates the potential reduction in cost through the correction of inappropriate imaging practices. These findings highlight an opportunity within the healthcare system to reduce unnecessary costs and overtreatment through guideline adherence.
PMID: 34137520
ISSN: 2573-8348
CID: 4936812
Randomized trial of community health worker-led decision coaching to promote shared decision-making for prostate cancer screening among Black male patients and their providers
Makarov, Danil V; Feuer, Zachary; Ciprut, Shannon; Lopez, Natalia Martinez; Fagerlin, Angela; Shedlin, Michele; Gold, Heather T; Li, Huilin; Lynch, Gina; Warren, Rueben; Ubel, Peter; Ravenell, Joseph E
BACKGROUND:Black men are disproportionately affected by prostate cancer, the most common non-cutaneous malignancy among men in the USA. The United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) encourages prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing decisions to be based on shared decision-making (SDM) clinician professional judgment, and patient preferences. However, evidence suggests that SDM is underutilized in clinical practice, especially among the most vulnerable patients. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of a community health worker (CHW)-led decision-coaching program to facilitate SDM for prostate cancer screening among Black men in the primary care setting, with the ultimate aim of improving/optimizing decision quality. METHODS:We proposed a CHW-led decision-coaching program to facilitate SDM for prostate cancer screening discussions in Black men at a primary care FQHC. This study enrolled Black men who were patients at the participating clinical site and up to 15 providers who cared for them. We estimated to recruit 228 participants, ages 40-69 to be randomized to either (1) a decision aid along with decision coaching on PSA screening from a CHW or (2) receiving a decision aid along with CHW-led interaction on modifying dietary and lifestyle to serve as an attention control. The independent randomization process was implemented within each provider and we controlled for age by dividing patients into two strata: 40-54 years and 55-69 years. This sample size sufficiently powered the detection differences in the primary study outcomes: knowledge, indicative of decision quality, and differences in PSA screening rates. Primary outcome measures for patients will be decision quality and decision regarding whether to undergo PSA screening. Primary outcome measures for providers will be acceptability and feasibility of the intervention. We will examine how decision coaching about prostate cancer screening impact patient-provider communication. These outcomes will be analyzed quantitatively through objective, validated scales and qualitatively through semi-structured, in-depth interviews, and thematic analysis of clinical encounters. Through a conceptual model combining elements of the Preventative Health Care Model (PHM) and Informed Decision-Making Model, we hypothesize that the prostate cancer screening decision coaching intervention will result in a preference-congruent decision and decisional satisfaction. We also hypothesize that this intervention will improve physician satisfaction with counseling patients about prostate cancer screening. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS:Decision coaching is an evidence-based approach to improve decision quality in many clinical contexts, but its efficacy is incompletely explored for PSA screening among Black men in primary care. Our proposal to evaluate a CHW-led decision-coaching program for PSA screening has high potential for scalability and public health impact. Our results will determine the efficacy, cost-effectiveness, and sustainability of a CHW intervention in a community clinic setting in order to inform subsequent widespread dissemination, a critical research area highlighted by USPSTF. TRIAL REGISTRATION/BACKGROUND:The trial was registered prospectively with the National Institute of Health registry ( www.clinicaltrials.gov ), registration number NCT03726320 , on October 31, 2018.
PMCID:7876807
PMID: 33568208
ISSN: 1745-6215
CID: 4779852
A practice facilitation-guided intervention in primary care settings to reduce cardiovascular disease risk: a cost analysis
Gold, Heather T; Siman, Nina; Cuthel, Allison M; Nguyen, Ann M; Pham-Singer, Hang; Berry, Carolyn A; Shelley, Donna R
BACKGROUND:A stepped-wedge, cluster randomized controlled trial assessed the effectiveness of practice facilitation (PF) for adoption of guidelines for prevention and treatment of cardiovascular disease risk factors. This study estimated the associated cost of PF for guideline adoption in small, private primary care practices. METHODS:The cost analysis included categories for start-up costs, intervention costs, and practice staff costs for the implemented PF-guided intervention. We estimated the total 1-year costs to operate the program and calculated the mean and range of the cost-per-practice by quarter of the intervention. We estimated the lower and upper bounds for all salary expenses, rounding to the nearest $100. RESULTS:Total 1-year intervention costs for all 261 practices ranged from $7,900,000 to $10,200,000, with program and practice salaries comprising $6,600,000-$8,400,000 of the total. Start-up costs were a small proportion (3%) of the total 1-year costs. Excluding start-up costs, quarter 1 cost-per-practice was the most expensive at $20,400-$26,700, and quarter 4 was the least expensive at about $10,000. Practice staff time (compared with program staff time) was the majority of the staffing costs at 75-84%. CONCLUSIONS:The PF strategy costs approximately $10,000 per practice per quarter for program and practice costs, once implemented and running at highest efficiency. Whether this program is "worth it" to the decision-maker depends on the relative costs and effectiveness of their other options for improving cardiovascular risk reduction. TRIAL REGISTRATION/BACKGROUND:This study is retrospectively registered on January 5, 2016, at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02646488 .
PMCID:7868016
PMID: 33549152
ISSN: 2662-2211
CID: 4837702
Clinical Trial Protocol for a Randomized Trial of Community Health Worker-led Decision Coaching to Promote Shared Decision-making on Prostate Cancer Screening Among Black Male Patients and Their Providers [Editorial]
V. Makarov, Danil; Ciprut, Shannon; Martinez-Lopez, Natalia; Fagerlin, Angela; Thomas, Jerry; Shedlin, Michele; Gold, Heather T.; Li, Huilin; Bhat, Sandeep; Warren, Rueben; Ubel, Peter; Ravenell, Joseph E.
ISI:000719424800005
ISSN: 2405-4569
CID: 5142662