About 80 million U.S. adults have hypertension, and hypertension treatment costs the nation about $80 billion annually. Effective and inexpensive antihypertensive medications are available, but many patients remain inadequately treated. The Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT) showed that in high CVD risk patients intensive treatment to a lower systolic blood pressure (SBP, <120 mm Hg) reduced CVD risk and all- cause mortality compared to standard treatment (SBP <140 mm Hg). We estimated that 16.8 million adults in the US meet the SPRINT eligibility criteria. Given this large number of eligible patients and the additional resources (e.g., health care provider time, laboratory visits) required to deliver intensive treatment, we need a method for selecting ?high-value? patients most likely to benefit safely from intensive SBP treatment. Optimize-SPRINT is a SPRINT ancillary study. Optimize-SPRINT will apply predictive modeling methods to SPRINT to build a clinical decision tool that will be able to select optimal patients (e.g., high absolute benefit and cost-effectiveness) for intensive SBP treatment both at the point of care (for health care providers and patients) and in the population (for private health system and government payers). Our innovative predication modeling methods will identify the highest benefit patients underlying the average summary treatment effect reported from SPRINT, while preserving the advantages of SPRINT's randomized design.
We aim to: ? Develop and validate a predictor of clinical benefit with intensive SBP treatment (SPRINT Clinical Benefit Tool) using baseline characteristics. ? Determine cost-effectiveness of intensive versus standard SBP treatment in SPRINT overall and by level of predicted SPRINT clinical benefit, and predict cost-effectiveness of intensive SBP treatment based on baseline characteristics. ? Determine the population health impact of implementing intensive SBP treatment based on predicted SPRINT Clinical Benefit and cost-effectiveness. Relevance: The results of this study may change the way health care providers, payers, and clinical guideline makers treat hypertension in the US and abroad. This study will inform treatment choice decisions by health care providers and patients, and improve implementation strategies for private and government payers.

Public Health Relevance

The Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT) showed that in high risk patients, intensive systolic blood pressure treatment reduced cardiovascular disease risk and all-cause mortality compared to standard treatment. Given that 16.8 million U.S. adults are high risk and meet SPRINT eligibility for intensive systolic blood pressure treatment, and the added costs of delivering intensive treatment, there is need for an approach to selecting the highest value patients for intensive systolic blood pressure treatment. In this study, we will apply randomized clinical trials, epidemiology, biostatistics, health economic evaluation, and decision analysis methods to develop a clinical decision tool that will identify for health care providers, private health care system and government payers the patients in whom intensive systolic blood pressure treatment will most likely reduce cardiovascular disease risk safely and cost-effectively.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01HL139837-01
Application #
9424137
Study Section
Cancer, Heart, and Sleep Epidemiology A Study Section (CHSA)
Program Officer
Fine, Larry
Project Start
2017-12-15
Project End
2021-11-30
Budget Start
2017-12-15
Budget End
2018-11-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Columbia University (N.Y.)
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
621889815
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10032