| Literature DB >> 27919865 |
Erik P Hess1,2,3, Judd E Hollander4, Jason T Schaffer5, Jeffrey A Kline5, Carlos A Torres6, Deborah B Diercks7, Russell Jones8, Kelly P Owen8, Zachary F Meisel9, Michel Demers10, Annie Leblanc2,11, Nilay D Shah11, Jonathan Inselman3, Jeph Herrin12, Ana Castaneda-Guarderas13,2,14, Victor M Montori2,15.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To compare the effectiveness of shared decision making with usual care in choice of admission for observation and further cardiac testing or for referral for outpatient evaluation in patients with possible acute coronary syndrome.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27919865 PMCID: PMC5152707 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.i6165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138

Fig 1 Decision aid to facilitate discussion between clinicians and patients on whether to be admitted to an observation unit in the emergency department for cardiac stress testing or to follow up with a clinician in 24-72 hours

Fig 2 Screen shot of quantitative pretest probability web tool. Figure displays 45 day probability of acute coronary syndrome for an African-American woman aged more than 50 years whose chest pain is not reproducible with palpation, is not diaphoretic, and there is no ST segment depression greater than 0.5 mm or T wave inversion deeper than −0.5 mm, incorporating the result of the first cardiac troponin test. In this case, a coordinator would select a decision aid demonstrating a 3 out of 100 risk, rounding up from 2.3% to prioritize patient safety

Fig 3 Participant flow diagram
Baseline characteristics of patients with low risk chest pain assigned to usual care or an aid for shared decision making. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise
| Characteristic | Usual care (n=447) | Decision aid (n=451) |
|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) age (years) | 50.6 (14.1) | 50.0 (15.0) |
| Median (interquartile range) age (years) | 51.0 (44.0-59.0) | 51.0 (43.0-58.0) |
| Women | 260 (58.2) | 274 (60.8) |
| Race: | ||
| American Indian/Alaska Native | 4 (0.9) | 4 (0.9) |
| Asian | 9 (2.0) | 6 (1.3) |
| Black or African-American | 154 (34.5) | 155 (34.4) |
| Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander | 0 (0.0) | 2 (0.4) |
| White | 269 (60.2) | 262 (58.1) |
| Other | 11 (2.5) | 22 (4.9) |
| Annual income ($) (n=850): | ||
| <20 000 | 84 (18.8) | 92 (20.4) |
| 20 000-30 000 | 39 (8.7) | 36 (8.0) |
| 30 000-40 000 | 46 (10.3) | 44 (9.8) |
| 40 000-60 000 | 65 (14.5) | 56 (12.4) |
| 60 000-80 000 | 59 (13.2) | 58 (12.9) |
| 80 000-100 000 | 37 (8.3) | 50 (11.1) |
| >100 000 | 93 (20.8) | 100 (22.2) |
| Highest level of education completed (n=881): | ||
| High school or less | 38 (8.5) | 47 (10.4) |
| High school or graduate education diploma | 109 (24.4) | 91 (20.2) |
| College or vocational school | 157 (35.1) | 150 (33.3) |
| College graduate (4 years) | 82 (18.3) | 98 (21.7) |
| Graduate degree | 54 (12.1) | 55 (12.2) |
| Literacy screening questions (often/always): | ||
| Need help reading medical instructions? | 36 (8.1) | 44 (9.8) |
| Confident filling out medical forms? | 358 (80.1) | 375 (83.1) |
| Have difficulty understanding written information about your medical condition? | 28 (6.3) | 40 (8.9) |
| Mean (SD) subjective numeracy scale score* | 4.3 (1.1) | 4.2 (1.1) |
| Median (interquartile range) numeracy | 4.4 (3.5-5.1) | 4.4 (3.4-5.1) |
| Hypertension | 202 (45.1) | 198 (43.9) |
| Dyslipidemia | 137 (30.6) | 114 (25.3) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 71 (15.8) | 61 (13.5) |
| Family history of cardiac disease | 182 (40.6) | 176 (39.0) |
| Smoking (current, recent cessation, or former) | 165 (36.8) | 181 (40.1) |
| Renal insufficiency | 9 (2.0) | 7 (1.6) |
| History of stroke or transient ischemic attack | 16 (3.6) | 18 (4.0) |
| Mean (SD) duration of chest pain (hours) | 3.3 (5.5) | 3.1 (5.0) |
| Median (interquartile range) duration of chest pain (hours) | 1.0 (0.3-4.0) | 1.0 (0.2-3.5) |
| Mean (SD) probability of ACS† | 3.8 (4.3) | 3.6 (3.7) |
| Median (interquartile range) probability of ACS | 2.8 (0.6-5.2) | 2.8 (0.6-5.2) |
| Friend or family member present | 244 (54.6) | 257 (57.0) |
$1.0 (£0.8; €0.9).
ACS=acute coronary syndrome.
*McNaughton et al.41
†Calculated from quantitative probability web tool.
Effect of decision aid on patient knowledge, decisional conflict, trust in physician, patient involvement in decision, and acceptability of the decision aid. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise
| Outcome | Usual care (n=447) | Decision aid (n=451) | Mean difference (95% CI) or P value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patient knowledge | |||
| Eight knowledge questions | 3.6 (1.5) | 4.2 (1.5) | 0.66 (0.46 to 0.86) |
| Correctly assessed 45 day risk for ACS | 2 (0.4) | 10 (2.2) | 0.039 |
| Correctly assessed 45 day risk for ACS within 10% | 81 (18.1) | 293 (65.0) | <0.001 |
| Decisional conflict and trust | |||
| Decisional conflict scale | 46.4 (14.8) | 43.5 (15.3) | -2.9 (-4.8 to -0.90) |
| Trust in physician scale | 87.7 (16.0) | 89.5 (13.4) | 1.7 (-0.2 to 3.6) |
| Patient involvement in decision | |||
| OPTION scale (n=536) | 7.9 (5.4) | 18.3 (9.4) | 10.3 (9.1 to 11.5) |
| Patient acceptability | |||
| Amount of information: | |||
| Too little (1-2) | 24 (5.5) | 12 (2.7) | 0.133 |
| Just right (3-5) | 401 (91.6) | 416 (94.3) | |
| Too much (6-7) | 13 (3.0) | 13 (2.9) | |
| Clarity of information: | |||
| Not clear at all (1-2) | 5 (1.1) | 7 (1.6) | 0.011 |
| Somewhat clear (3-5) | 137 (31.3) | 98 (22.3) | |
| Extremely clear (6-7) | 296 (67.6) | 335 (76.1) | |
| Helpfulness of the information: | |||
| Not helpful at all (1-2) | 10 (2.3) | 7 (1.6) | 0.506 |
| Somewhat helpful (3-5) | 125 (28.5) | 114 (25.9) | |
| Extremely helpful (6-7) | 303 (69.2) | 320 (72.6) | |
| Would recommend to others: | |||
| Yes (1-2) | 349 (79.9) | 387 (88.0) | 0.004 |
| Not sure (3-5) | 77 (17.6) | 44 (10.0) | |
| No (6-7) | 11 (2.5) | 9 (2.0) | |
| Would want to use for other decisions: | |||
| Yes (1-2) | 335 (76.7) | 346 (78.6) | 0.813 |
| Not sure (3-5) | 83 (19.0) | 77 (17.5) | |
| No (6-7) | 19 (4.3) | 17 (3.9) | |
| Clinician acceptability | |||
| Helpfulness of the information: | |||
| Not helpful at all (1-2) | 13 (3.1) | 24 (5.5) | <0.001 |
| Somewhat helpful (3-5) | 265 (63.2) | 175 (40.3) | |
| Extremely helpful (6-7) | 141 (33.7) | 235 (54.1) | |
| Would recommend to others: | |||
| Yes (1-2) | 175 (41.9) | 271 (62.7) | <0.001 |
| Not sure (3-5) | 234 (56.0) | 148 (34.3) | |
| No (6-7) | 9 (2.2) | 13 (3.0) | |
| Would want to use for other decisions: | |||
| Yes (1-2) | 183 (43.8) | 273 (62.9) | <0.001 |
| Not sure (3-5) | 229 (54.8) | 148 (34.1) | |
| No (6-7) | 6 (1.4) | 13 (3.0) | |
Management and 30 day outcomes
| Characteristic | Usual care (n=447) | Decision aid (n=451) | P value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shared management decision: | |||
| Observation unit admission for stress testing or CCTA | 225 (52.1) | 165 (37.3) | <0.001 |
| Follow up with a cardiologist | 52 (12.0) | 101 (22.9) | |
| Follow up with a primary care physician | 100 (23.1) | 138 (31.2) | |
| Have emergency physician decide | 55 (12.7) | 38 (8.6) | |
| Cardiac stress test performed within 30 days | 204 (45.6) | 172 (38.1) | 0.013 |
| Outpatient stress testing: | 35 (17.2) | 52 (30.2) | 0.001 |
| Exercise treadmill testing | 65 (31.9) | 44 (25.6) | 0.779 |
| Stress echocardiography | 86 (42.2) | 81 (47.1) | |
| Nuclear perfusion testing | 39 (19.1) | 37 (21.5) | |
| Other | 14 (6.9) | 10 (5.8) | |
| CCTA performed within 30 days | 80 (17.9) | 63 (14.0) | 0.111 |
| Coronary revascularization | 4 (0.9) | 7 (1.6) | 0.366 |
| Percutaneous coronary intervention | 3 (75.0) | 6 (85.7) | |
| Coronary artery bypass grafting | 1 (25.0) | 1 (14.3) | |
| Admitted to hospital from ED observation unit | 22 (4.9) | 22 (4.9) | 0.990 |
| Repeat ED visit | 39 (9.3) | 52 (12.5) | 0.156 |
| Readmission to hospital | 19 (4.5) | 20 (4.8) | 0.884 |
| Outpatient clinic visit | 259 (62.0) | 266 (64.1) | 0.568 |
| Cardiac events: | |||
| Acute myocardial infarction | 1 (0.2) | 4 (0.9) | 0.215 |
| Death of cardiac or unknown cause | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 1.00 |
| MACE within 30 days* | 0 (0.0) | 1 (0.2) | 0.998 |
CCTA=coronary computed tomography angiography; ED=emergency department; MACE=.major adverse cardiac event.
*Excluding the index event.