Effectiveness of a Multicomponent Quality Improvement Strategy to Improve Achievement of Diabetes Care Goals

Mohammed K. Ali(Topiwala National Medical College & BYL Nair Charitable Hospital), Kavita Singh(Aga Khan University), Dimple Kondal(Public Health Foundation of India), Raji Devarajan(Public Health Foundation of India), Shivani A. Patel(India Diabetes Research Foundation), Roopa Shivashankar(Emory University), Vamadevan S. Ajay(Emory University), A G Unnikrishnan(Public Health Foundation of India), V. Usha Menon(All India Institute of Medical Sciences), Premlata K Varthakavi(Goa Medical College), Vijay Viswanathan(Bangalore Diabetes Centre), Mala Dharmalingam(Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Centre), Ganapati Bantwal(Emory University), Rakesh Sahay(All India Institute of Medical Sciences), Muhammad Qamar Masood(M.V. Hospital for Diabetes and Diabetes Research Centre), Rajesh Khadgawat(All India Institute of Medical Sciences), Ankush Desai(Bangalore Diabetes Centre), Bipin Sethi(M.V. Hospital for Diabetes and Diabetes Research Centre), Dorairaj Prabhakaran(India Diabetes Research Foundation), K.M. Venkat Narayan(Osmania General Hospital), Nikhil Tandon(Public Health Foundation of India), on behalf of the CARRS Trial Group*
Annals of Internal Medicine
July 11, 2016
Cited by 112Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Achievement of diabetes care goals is suboptimal globally. Diabetes-focused quality improvement (QI) is effective but remains untested in South Asia. OBJECTIVE: To compare the effect of a multicomponent QI strategy versus usual care on cardiometabolic profiles in patients with poorly controlled diabetes. DESIGN: Parallel, open-label, pragmatic randomized, controlled trial. (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01212328). SETTING: Diabetes clinics in India and Pakistan. PATIENTS: 1146 patients (575 in the intervention group and 571 in the usual care group) with type 2 diabetes and poor cardiometabolic profiles (glycated hemoglobin [HbA1c] level ≥8% plus systolic blood pressure [BP] ≥140 mm Hg and/or low-density lipoprotein cholesterol [LDLc] level ≥130 mg/dL). INTERVENTION: Multicomponent QI strategy comprising nonphysician care coordinators and decision-support electronic health records. MEASUREMENTS: Proportions achieving HbA1c level less than 7% plus BP less than 130/80 mm Hg and/or LDLc level less than 100 mg/dL (primary outcome); mean risk factor reductions, health-related quality of life (HRQL), and treatment satisfaction (secondary outcomes). RESULTS: Baseline characteristics were similar between groups. Median diabetes duration was 7.0 years; 6.8% and 39.4% of participants had preexisting cardiovascular and microvascular disease, respectively; mean HbA1c level was 9.9%; mean BP was 143.3/81.7 mm Hg; and mean LDLc level was 122.4 mg/dL. Over a median of 28 months, a greater percentage of intervention participants achieved the primary outcome (18.2% vs. 8.1%; relative risk, 2.24 [95% CI, 1.71 to 2.92]). Compared with usual care, intervention participants achieved larger reductions in HbA1c level (-0.50% [CI, -0.69% to -0.32%]), systolic BP (-4.04 mm Hg [CI, -5.85 to -2.22 mm Hg]), diastolic BP (-2.03 mm Hg [CI, -3.00 to -1.05 mm Hg]), and LDLc level (-7.86 mg/dL [CI, -10.90 to -4.81 mg/dL]) and reported higher HRQL and treatment satisfaction. LIMITATION: Findings were confined to urban specialist diabetes clinics. CONCLUSION: Multicomponent QI improves achievement of diabetes care goals, even in resource-challenged clinics. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE: National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and UnitedHealth Group.


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