Clinical decision support to Optimize Care of patients with Atrial Fibrillation or flutter in the Emergency department: protocol of a stepped-wedge cluster randomized pragmatic trial (O’CAFÉ trial)
David R. Vinson,
Adina S. Rauchwerger,
Chandu A. Karadi,
Judy Shan,
E. Margaret Warton,
Jennifer Y. Zhang,
Dustin W. Ballard,
Dustin G. Mark,
Erik R. Hofmann,
Dale M. Cotton,
Edward J. Durant,
James S. Lin,
Dana R. Sax,
Luke S. Poth,
Stephen H. Gamboa,
Meena S. Ghiya,
Mamata V. Kene,
Anuradha Ganapathy,
Patrick M. Whiteley,
Sean C. Bouvet,
Leon Babakhanian,
Edward W. Kwok,
Matthew D. Solomon,
Alan S. Go,
Mary E. Reed,
on behalf of the Kaiser Permanente CREST Network
Affiliations
David R. Vinson
The Permanente Medical Group
Adina S. Rauchwerger
Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California
Chandu A. Karadi
The Permanente Medical Group
Judy Shan
Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California
E. Margaret Warton
Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California
Jennifer Y. Zhang
Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California
Dustin W. Ballard
The Permanente Medical Group
Dustin G. Mark
The Permanente Medical Group
Erik R. Hofmann
The Permanente Medical Group
Dale M. Cotton
The Permanente Medical Group
Edward J. Durant
The Permanente Medical Group
James S. Lin
The Permanente Medical Group
Dana R. Sax
The Permanente Medical Group
Luke S. Poth
The Permanente Medical Group
Stephen H. Gamboa
The Permanente Medical Group
Meena S. Ghiya
The Permanente Medical Group
Mamata V. Kene
The Permanente Medical Group
Anuradha Ganapathy
The Permanente Medical Group
Patrick M. Whiteley
The Permanente Medical Group
Sean C. Bouvet
The Permanente Medical Group
Leon Babakhanian
Edward W. Kwok
Matthew D. Solomon
The Permanente Medical Group
Alan S. Go
The Permanente Medical Group
Mary E. Reed
Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California
Abstract Background Management of adults with atrial fibrillation (AF) or atrial flutter in the emergency department (ED) includes rate reduction, cardioversion, and stroke prevention. Different approaches to these components of care may lead to variation in frequency of hospitalization and stroke prevention actions, with significant implications for patient experience, cost of care, and risk of complications. Standardization using evidence-based recommendations could reduce variation in management, preventable hospitalizations, and stroke risk. Methods We describe the rationale for our ED-based AF treatment recommendations. We also describe the development of an electronic clinical decision support system (CDSS) to deliver these recommendations to emergency physicians at the point of care. We implemented the CDSS at three pilot sites to assess feasibility and solicit user feedback. We will evaluate the impact of the CDSS on hospitalization and stroke prevention actions using a stepped-wedge cluster randomized pragmatic clinical trial across 13 community EDs in Northern California. Discussion We hypothesize that the CDSS intervention will reduce hospitalization of adults with isolated AF or atrial flutter presenting to the ED and increase anticoagulation prescription in eligible patients at the time of ED discharge and within 30 days. If our hypotheses are confirmed, the treatment protocol and CDSS could be recommended to other EDs to improve management of adults with AF or atrial flutter. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05009225 . Registered on 17 August 2021.