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Primary Care-Based Digital Health-Enabled Stroke Management Intervention: Long-Term Follow-Up of a Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Tan, J; Gong, E; Gallis, JA; Sun, S; Chen, X; Turner, EL; Luo, S; Duan, J; Li, Z; Wang, Y; Yang, B; Lu, S; Tang, S; Bettger, JP; Kinra, S ...
Published in: JAMA network open
December 2024

Despite evidence of the short-term benefits of multicomponent primary care-based interventions, their long-term effects are unproven.To evaluate the long-term outcomes of a system-integrated technology-enabled model of care (SINEMA intervention) for stroke management for systolic blood pressure (BP) and other outcomes among patients with stroke in China.This long-term follow-up included community-dwelling clinically stable surviving participants with stroke in an open-label cluster randomized clinical trial. Of 218 villages from Nanhe County in Hebei, China, an area with suboptimal health care resources and stroke prevalence doubling the national average, 50 villages (clusters) were recruited between June 23 and July 29, 2017, and randomized in a 1:1 ratio to an intervention or a control arm (usual care). The intervention lasted 1 year (to July 31, 2018), with a posttrial observational follow-up conducted from October 1, 2022, to August 27, 2023.Village doctors were provided with training, performance-based incentives, technical support, and customized mobile health tools to deliver monthly follow-up to patients. Patients also received daily voice messages emphasizing medication adherence and physical activity. No intervention was requested or supported during the posttrial period.Between-arm differences in intention-to-treat analyses of individual-level changes from baseline to long-term posttrial in systolic BP (primary outcome) and stroke recurrence, diastolic BP, BP control, antihypertensive medication use and regimen adherence, and disability (secondary outcomes).Among a total of 1042 stroke survivors, 44 (4.2%) were lost to follow-up and 998 (mean [SD] age at baseline: 65.0 [8.2] years; 544 [54.4%] men) completed posttrial assessment at a mean (SD) period of 66.6 (3.7) months (5.5 years) after baseline. The multicomponent intervention was associated with an estimated between-arm net reduction in systolic BP of -2.8 (95% CI, -5.3 to -0.3) mm Hg (P = .03). Most secondary outcomes showed a tendency toward lasting effects, with a notable absolute net reduction of 6.0 (95% CI, -11.3 to -0.7) percentage points and risk ratio of 0.77 (95% CI, 0.61-0.99) for stroke recurrence. In subgroup analyses, significant between-arm differences were observed among women and people with lower educational attainment, lower income, and higher use of and adherence to medications.In this long-term follow-up of a cluster randomized clinical trial, the 1-year intervention was associated with significantly reduced systolic BP and stroke recurrence at 5.5 years, providing evidence of long-term health and inequity-reducing benefits and holding promise for scaling up of the intervention in resource-limited settings.ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05792618.

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Published In

JAMA network open

DOI

EISSN

2574-3805

ISSN

2574-3805

Publication Date

December 2024

Volume

7

Issue

12

Start / End Page

e2449561

Related Subject Headings

  • Telemedicine
  • Stroke
  • Primary Health Care
  • Middle Aged
  • Male
  • Humans
  • Follow-Up Studies
  • Female
  • Digital Health
  • China
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Tan, J., Gong, E., Gallis, J. A., Sun, S., Chen, X., Turner, E. L., … Yan, L. L. (2024). Primary Care-Based Digital Health-Enabled Stroke Management Intervention: Long-Term Follow-Up of a Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Network Open, 7(12), e2449561. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.49561
Tan, Jie, Enying Gong, John A. Gallis, Shifeng Sun, Xingxing Chen, Elizabeth L. Turner, Siran Luo, et al. “Primary Care-Based Digital Health-Enabled Stroke Management Intervention: Long-Term Follow-Up of a Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial.JAMA Network Open 7, no. 12 (December 2024): e2449561. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.49561.
Tan J, Gong E, Gallis JA, Sun S, Chen X, Turner EL, et al. Primary Care-Based Digital Health-Enabled Stroke Management Intervention: Long-Term Follow-Up of a Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA network open. 2024 Dec;7(12):e2449561.
Tan, Jie, et al. “Primary Care-Based Digital Health-Enabled Stroke Management Intervention: Long-Term Follow-Up of a Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial.JAMA Network Open, vol. 7, no. 12, Dec. 2024, p. e2449561. Epmc, doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.49561.
Tan J, Gong E, Gallis JA, Sun S, Chen X, Turner EL, Luo S, Duan J, Li Z, Wang Y, Yang B, Lu S, Tang S, Bettger JP, Oldenburg B, Miranda JJ, Karmacharya B, Kinra S, Shao R, Ebrahim S, Yan LL. Primary Care-Based Digital Health-Enabled Stroke Management Intervention: Long-Term Follow-Up of a Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA network open. 2024 Dec;7(12):e2449561.

Published In

JAMA network open

DOI

EISSN

2574-3805

ISSN

2574-3805

Publication Date

December 2024

Volume

7

Issue

12

Start / End Page

e2449561

Related Subject Headings

  • Telemedicine
  • Stroke
  • Primary Health Care
  • Middle Aged
  • Male
  • Humans
  • Follow-Up Studies
  • Female
  • Digital Health
  • China