Advancement of the implementation of evidence-based therapies for cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic conditions: A multi-stakeholder perspective.

Abstract

Cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of mortality and healthcare expenditures in the United States. It is also a major contributor to premature mortality, years lived with disability, and rising healthcare costs around the world. Despite the availability of proven therapies and interventions that could vastly decrease the burden of cardiovascular disease and cardiometabolic conditions, their implementation is poor, with generally less than half of patients being treated with the most effective therapies. Implementation science offers promise in bridging this gap and mitigating disparities. However, even though small studies have shown that there are effective methods to improve the implementation of evidence-based therapies, these methods have not been scaled to make an impact at the level of health systems or nationally. A coordinated, multi-stakeholder approach is essential to identify barriers to implementation on a broad scale and, more critically, to develop and deploy practical solutions. The Duke Clinical Research Institute conducted an Implementation Summit entitled "Scalability, Spread, and Sustainability" to explore strategies for advancing the uptake of evidence-based interventions for cardiometabolic diseases in healthcare in the United States. This manuscript presents the participants' multi-stakeholder perspective on the steps necessary to improve the implementation of evidence-based therapies in cardiometabolic disease. Key recommendations include focused efforts on evidence generation around broad implementation strategies, dissemination of the evidence generated, uptake of evidence into usual care settings, and investment in training the current and next generations of leaders in implementation.

Department

Description

Provenance

Subjects

Humans, Cardiovascular Diseases, Metabolic Diseases, Evidence-Based Medicine, United States, Stakeholder Participation, Implementation Science

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1016/j.ahj.2025.03.005

Publication Info

Osude, Nkiru, Harriette Van Spall, Hayden Bosworth, Konstantin Krychtiuk, John Spertus, Samuel Fatoba, Lee Fleisher, Edward Fry, et al. (2025). Advancement of the implementation of evidence-based therapies for cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic conditions: A multi-stakeholder perspective. American heart journal, 286. pp. 18–34. 10.1016/j.ahj.2025.03.005 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/34394.

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Scholars@Duke

Osude

Nkiru Cynthia Osude

Medical Assistant Professor in the Department of Medicine
Green

Jennifer Brigitte Green

Professor of Medicine

Diabetes Mellitus: Prevention strategies, predictors, treatment effects; kidney and other complications including cardiovascular outcomes. Utilization of EHR data to construct tools to improve the care of diabetes and comorbid conditions.

Greene

Stephen Greene

Associate Professor of Medicine

I am a cardiologist with a clinical and research interest in heart failure. I take care of patients with various types of heart failure, including patients who are best treated with medications and patients who receive advanced therapies like heart transplantation and mechanical assist devices. I became a heart failure cardiologist to help patients manage their heart conditions and best achieve their goals for their health. I am strongly committed to helping patients thoroughly understand their medical conditions and helping them make informed medical decisions aligned with their preferences.

My research interests are focused on strategies and therapies to improve outcomes and quality of life for patients with heart failure. This involves research through clinical trials and through examining data from real-world clinical practice. Below, you will find my specific research interests:

  • Use and dosing of evidence-based heart failure medications
  • Management of worsening heart failure outside the hospital
  • Novel pharmacological and non-pharmacological approaches to heart failure
  • Improving outcomes following a hospitalization for heart failure
  • Surrogate and nonfatal endpoints in heart failure clinical trials
  • Clinical trial design and operations
  • Improving site-based heart failure research
Pagidipati

Neha Pagidipati

Associate Professor of Medicine

Neha J. Pagidipati, MD, MPH, is an Assistant Professor of Medicine and cardiovascular disease prevention specialist.  Since 2011, she has conducted research on cardiometabolic disease prevention, lifestyle modification and weight management.  She is currently an NIH K12 scholar in Implementation and Dissemination Science. 

Dr. Pagidipati is building the Duke Cardiometabolic Disease Prevention Program, which focuses on behavior change and risk factor management in patients with high risk of cardiovascular and metabolic diseases such as diabetes and obesity.  The program’s multi-disciplinary team of cardiologists, endocrinologists, nephrologists, and hepatologists will work together to provide coordinated, team-based care to the most high-risk and complex patients in the health system. 

Dr. Pagidipati’s research grants include the COORDINATE-Diabetes Trial, to improve the quality of care for patients with diabetes and cardiovascular disease across the U.S., and QuBBD:  Deep Poisson Methods for Biomedical Time-to-Event and Longitudinal Data.  She served as a study clinician on the large, longitudinal EXSCEL (Exenatide Study of Cardiovascular Event Lowering) trial.  She is currently conducting a nation-wide study of obesity management using real-world data sources, and is a site investigator for the Baseline Health Study in collaboration with Verily Life Sciences. In addition, she is leading a large study within the Duke Health System to study heterogeneity within cardiovascular disease risk and response to weight loss interventions among individuals with obesity. 

Dr. Pagidipati graduated from Harvard College and Harvard Medical School.  She completed her internal medicine residency at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.  During a two-year research fellowship in Global Women’s Health at the Brigham, she obtained an MPH from the Harvard School of Public Health and studied cardiovascular disease prevention in women in India.  Dr. Pagidipati completed a four-year cardiology fellowship at the Duke University School of Medicine and served as Chief Research Fellow at the Duke Clinical Research Institute.  In 2017, she became a faculty member of the Duke University School of Medicine School. 

Granger

Christopher Bull Granger

Fred Cobb, M.D. Distinguished Professor of Medicine

Research:
My primary research interest is in conduct and methodology of large randomized clinical trials in heart disease. I have led a number of large international clinical studies in heart attacks, unstable angina, heart failure, and atrial fibrillation. I have lead clinical studies of blood thinners and coronary intervention for heart attacks, stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation, and prevention of heart attack for patients with coronary artery disease. I have been co-director of the Reperfusion of Acute MI in Carolina Emergency Departments (RACE) project that is a North Carolina state-wide program to improve reperfusion care for acute myocardial infarction. I serve as the Chairman of the American Heart Association Mission: Lifeline program to improve heart attack care nationally as well as the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guideline committee for heart attack care. I have also studied the effects of genetic variation on heart disease. I work with the National Institute of Health and the Federal Drug Administration on evaluation of heart disease and of new drugs. I have developed tools to predict which patients are at risk for death, heart attack, and need for hospitalization.


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