Algemeen

PINGS: telefonische, verpleegkundig geleide bloeddrukcontrole na een beroerte (Ghana)

In lage-inkomenslanden bereikt minder dan 10% van de mensen met hypertensie ooit een goede bloeddrukcontrole. De PINGS-trial (Ghana, 10 ziekenhuizen, 500 patiënten met een recente beroerte en verhoogde bloeddruk) vergeleek gebruikelijke zorg met een twaalf maanden durende interventie: thuismeting van de bloeddruk met verpleegkundig casemanagement, medicatieherinneringen via telefoonalarmen en wekelijkse audioberichten over risicoreductie in lokale dialecten. Na twaalf maanden was de systolische bloeddruk gemiddeld 5,5 mmHg lager en bereikte 67% van de interventiegroep een systolische bloeddruk onder 140 mmHg, versus 43% bij gebruikelijke zorg (verschil 24%). Laagdrempelige mHealth met taakverschuiving naar verpleegkundigen kan de bloeddrukcontrole bij beroertepatiënten in arme settings veilig verbeteren.

Abstract (original)

BACKGROUND:Addressing the rising burden of stroke in low-income countries will require pragmatic and scalable interventions targeting major risk factors. Under routine care settings, <10% of adults living with hypertension ever achieve blood pressure control, accentuating risks for adverse vascular events. The effectiveness of mobile health–centered, nurse-led interventions for the control of hypertension among patients with recent stroke in a resource-limited African setting is unknown.METHODS:The PINGS (Phone-Based Intervention Under Nurse Guidance After Stroke) trial compared the efficacy and safety of usual care versus a 12-month intervention comprising home blood pressure self-monitoring with nurse case management for elevated home blood pressure recordings, use of phone alarms as medication reminders, and once-weekly education about cardiovascular risk reduction delivered by regular telephonic audio messages in selected Ghanaian dialects. This was a multicenter, randomized, open-label, blinded end point evaluation trial conducted at 10 hospitals between October 23, 2020, and April 5, 2024. We enrolled 500 patients ≥18 years with stroke within 1 month of onset and elevated blood pressure ≥140 or ≥90 mm Hg. The primary outcome was systolic blood pressure <140 mm Hg at month 12 by intention-to-treat principle. Secondary outcomes included major adverse cardiovascular events and serious adverse events.RESULTS:A total of 244 participants were assigned to the intervention group (PINGS) and 256 to the usual care group, of whom 43% were women, with mean (SD) age 58 (11) years. Mean change in systolic blood pressure at month 12 from baseline was –5.5 mm Hg (95% CI, –9.6 to –1.4 mm Hg;P=0.008). The primary outcome was achieved in 163 (67%) patients with PINGS versus 109 (43%) in the usual care arm, with a between-group difference of 24% (95% CI, 15%–33%;P<0.001). No significant between-group differences were noted in the secondary outcome of major adverse cardiovascular events or the presumed key mediator of medication adherence. Serious adverse events were 27 of 244 (11.1%) with PINGS versus 18 of 256 (7.0%) in usual care (P=0.12).CONCLUSIONS:Leveraging mhealth with minimal sophistication and task shifting to nurses on top of usual care could safely improve blood pressure control among stroke survivors in low-resource settings, but further study is warranted to confirm these findings and understand outcome drivers.REGISTRATION:URL:https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT04404166.

Dit artikel is een samenvatting van een publicatie in Circulation. Voor het volledige artikel, alle details en referenties verwijzen wij u naar de oorspronkelijke bron.

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