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Hospitals
with Clinical Trials may provide better
patient care
Newswise — Hospitals
that participate in clinical trials appear
to provide better care for patients with
heart attacks or other acute heart events
and have lower death rates than hospitals
that do not participate in clinical trials,
according to a report in the March 24 issue
of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the
JAMA/Archives journals.
Quality of care for common conditions such
as acute coronary syndromes has slowly
improved after the implementation of
clinical guidelines, performance measurement
and quality improvement efforts.
Recent studies suggest
that physician leadership, presence of
shared goals, administrative support and
credible feedback are associated with better
hospital performance. Three of these
characteristics are also believed to be
important in successfully conducting
hospital-based clinical trials.
“We hypothesized that
these same elements required for hospitals
to participate in trials could induce
beneficial changes in the hospital
environment, thereby leading to better
processes and outcomes of care for patients
treated outside the trial setting,” the
authors write.
Sumit R. Majumdar,
M.D., M.P.H., of the University of Alberta,
Canada, and colleagues analyzed data from
174,062 patients with two specific types of
heart conditions, high-risk non–ST-segment
elevation acute coronary syndrome with
unstable angina and non–ST-segment elevation
myocardial infarction.
The patients were
admitted to 494 hospitals participating in
Can Rapid Risk Stratification of Unstable
Angina Patients Suppress Adverse Outcomes
With Early Implementation of the American
College of Cardiology/American Heart
Association Guidelines (CRUSADE)—an ongoing,
voluntary, observational data collection and
quality improvement initiative—from Jan. 1,
2001 to June 30, 2006. Process-of-care and
in-hospital outcome data were collected.
Patients were split
into three groups: those treated at
hospitals with no trial participation
(29,984 patients), low trial participation
(93,705 patients) and high trial
participation (50,373 patients).
In total, 4,590 patients (2.6 percent) were
enrolled in clinical trials, with 145
hospitals having no enrollment, 226
hospitals having a midpoint of 1 percent
enrollment and 123 hospitals having a
midpoint of 4.9 percent enrollment.
The overall (composite) median (midpoint)
guideline adherence scores increased with
increasing levels of trial participation,
from 76.9 percent among hospitals with no
trial enrollment, 78.3 percent for hospitals
with low trial enrollment and 81.1 percent
among hospitals with high trial enrollment.
“In-hospital mortality
decreased with increasing trial
participation: 5.9 percent vs. 4.4 percent
vs. 3.5 percent,” the authors write.
“Patients treated at
hospitals that participated in trials had
significantly lower mortality than patients
treated at non-participating hospitals.”
“In conclusion, patients treated at
hospitals that participate in clinical
trials seem to receive better quality of
care and seem to have significantly better
outcomes than patients treated at hospitals
that do not participate in trials−at least
in the setting of acute coronary syndrome,”
the authors conclude.
“For policy makers and
physicians, our findings should assuage some
of the concerns related to the possible
opportunity costs and potential downsides of
participating in the clinical research
enterprise.”
Editor’s Note: This study was supported by
CRUSADE, a National Quality Improvement
Initiative of the Duke Clinical Research
Institute, which was funded by Schering
Plough Corporation, Bristol Myers Squibb/Sanofi
Aventis Pharmaceuticals Partnership and
Millenium Pharmaceuticals.
Dr. Majumdar receives
salary support awards from the Alberta
Heritage Foundation for Medical Research
(Health Scholar) and the Canadian Institutes
of Health Research (New Investigator).
Please see the article for additional
information, including other authors, author
contributions and affiliations, financial
disclosures, funding and support, etc.
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