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临床决策支持工具能否改善心血管疾病一级预防中的医疗护理结果:一项系统评价与荟萃分析

Do clinical decision support tools improve quality of care outcomes in the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

作者信息

Buzancic Iva, Koh Harvey Jia Wei, Trin Caroline, Nash Caitlin, Ortner Hadziabdic Maja, Belec Dora, Zoungas Sophia, Zomer Ella, Dalli Lachlan, Ademi Zanfina, Chua Bryan, Talic Stella

机构信息

Faculty of Pharmacy and Biochemistry, University of Zagreb, A. Kovacica 1, Zagreb, Croatia.

City Pharmacies Zagreb, Ulica kralja Drzislava 6, Zagreb, Croatia.

出版信息

Am J Prev Cardiol. 2024 Sep 20;20:100855. doi: 10.1016/j.ajpc.2024.100855. eCollection 2024 Dec.

Abstract

AIM

To assess the effectiveness of Clinical Decision Support Tools (CDSTs) in enhancing the quality of care outcomes in primary cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention.

METHODS

A systematic review was undertaken in accordance with PRISMA guidelines, and included searches in Ovid Medline, Ovid Embase, CINAHL, and Scopus. Eligible studies were randomized controlled trials of CDSTs comprising digital notifications in electronic health systems (EHS/EHR) in various primary healthcare settings, published post-2013, in patients with CVD risks and without established CVD. Two reviewers independently assessed risk of bias using the Cochrane RoB-2 tool. Attainment of clinical targets was analysed using a Restricted Maximum Likelihood random effects meta-analysis. Other relevant outcomes were narratively synthesised due to heterogeneity of studies and outcome metrics.

RESULTS

Meta-analysis revealed CDSTs showed improvement in systolic (Mean Standardised Difference (MSD)=0.39, 95 %CI=-0.31, -1.10) and diastolic blood pressure target achievement (MSD=0.34, 95 %CI=-0.24, -0.92), but had no significant impact on lipid (MSD=0.01; 95 %CI=-0.10, 0.11) or glucose target attainment (MSD=-0.19, 95 %CI=-0.66, 0.28). The CDSTs with active prompts increased statin initiation and improved patients' adherence to clinical appointments but had minimal effect on other medications and on enhancing adherence to medication.

CONCLUSION

CDSTs were found to be effective in improving blood pressure clinical target attainments. However, the presence of multi-layered barriers affecting the uptake, longer-term use and active engagement from both clinicians and patients may hinder the full potential for achieving other quality of care outcomes.

LAY SUMMARY

The study aimed to evaluate how Clinical Decision Support Tools (CDSTs) impact the quality of care for primary cardiovascular disease (CVD) management. CDSTs are tools designed to support healthcare professionals in delivering the best possible care to patients by providing timely and relevant information at the point of care (ie. digital notifications in electronic health systems). Although CDST are designed to improve the quality of healthcare outcomes, the current evidence of their effectiveness is inconsistent. Therefore, we conducted a systematic review with meta-analysis, to quantify the effectiveness of CDSTs. The eligibility criteria targeted patients with CVD risk factors, but without diagnosed CVD. The meta-analysis found that CDSTs showed improvement in systolic and diastolic blood pressure target achievement but did not significantly impact lipid or glucose target attainment. Specifically, CDSTs showed effectiveness in increasing statin prescribing but not antihypertensives or antidiabetics prescribing. Interventions with CDSTs aimed at increasing screening programmes were effective for patients with kidney diseases and high-risk patients, but not for patients with diabetes or teenage patients with hypertension. Alerts were effective in improving patients' adherence to clinical appointments but not in medication adherence. This study suggests CDSTs are effective in enhancing a limited number of quality of care outcomes in primary CVD prevention, but there is need for future research to explore the mechanisms and context of multiple barriers that may hinder the full potential for cardiovascular health outcomes to be achieved.

摘要

目的

评估临床决策支持工具(CDSTs)在提高原发性心血管疾病(CVD)预防中护理结果质量方面的有效性。

方法

按照PRISMA指南进行系统评价,检索了Ovid Medline、Ovid Embase、CINAHL和Scopus数据库。纳入的研究为2013年后发表的、在各种基层医疗环境中针对有CVD风险但未确诊CVD的患者、采用电子健康系统(EHS/EHR)中的数字通知形式的CDSTs的随机对照试验。两名评价员使用Cochrane RoB-2工具独立评估偏倚风险。采用限制最大似然随机效应荟萃分析来分析临床目标的达成情况。由于研究和结局指标的异质性,对其他相关结局进行了叙述性综合分析。

结果

荟萃分析显示,CDSTs在收缩压(平均标准化差异(MSD)=0.39,95%CI=-0.31,-1.10)和舒张压目标达成方面有改善(MSD=0.34,95%CI=-0.24,-0.92),但对血脂(MSD=0.01;95%CI=-0.10,0.11)或血糖目标达成无显著影响(MSD=-0.19,95%CI=-0.66,0.28)。带有主动提示的CDSTs增加了他汀类药物的起始使用,并改善了患者对临床预约的依从性,但对其他药物及提高药物依从性的影响极小。

结论

发现CDSTs在改善血压临床目标达成方面有效。然而,存在影响临床医生和患者采用、长期使用及积极参与的多层障碍,这可能会阻碍实现其他护理结果质量的全部潜力。

简要概述

本研究旨在评估临床决策支持工具(CDSTs)如何影响原发性心血管疾病(CVD)管理的护理质量。CDSTs是旨在通过在护理点提供及时且相关的信息(如电子健康系统中的数字通知)来支持医护人员为患者提供最佳护理的工具。尽管CDSTs旨在提高医疗护理结果的质量,但其有效性的现有证据并不一致。因此,我们进行了一项带有荟萃分析的系统评价,以量化CDSTs的有效性。纳入标准针对有CVD风险因素但未确诊CVD的患者。荟萃分析发现,CDSTs在收缩压和舒张压目标达成方面有改善,但对血脂或血糖目标达成无显著影响。具体而言,CDSTs在增加他汀类药物处方方面显示出有效性,但在抗高血压药或抗糖尿病药处方方面并非如此。旨在增加筛查项目的CDSTs干预措施对肾病患者和高危患者有效,但对糖尿病患者或青少年高血压患者无效。警报在改善患者对临床预约的依从性方面有效,但在药物依从性方面无效。本研究表明,CDSTs在提高原发性CVD预防中有限数量的护理结果质量方面有效,但未来需要开展研究以探索可能阻碍实现心血管健康结果全部潜力的多种障碍的机制和背景。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/8225/11481602/4585a69e71c3/gr1.jpg

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