Background: Electronic consultation (eConsultation) offers a potential mechanism to increase access to specialty care, address knowledge gaps, and overcome therapeutic inertia in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) being managed by primary care physicians (PCPs).
Objective: To develop and implement a system to provide unsolicited endocrinology eConsult for T2DM patients with HbA1c 8.5-10.5% managed by PCPs.
Design: Cluster-randomized matched cohort study with implementation evaluation.
Participants: PCPs affiliated with Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH).
Interventions: Unsolicited endocrinology eConsultation.
Main Measures: The primary clinical outcome was mean change in HbA1c at 6 months. Secondary process outcomes included referral completion rate, prescription rates of glucose-lowering medications, differences in rate of other management recommendations, change in all glucose-lowering medications, and number of face-to-face endocrinology visits.
Key Results: 161 PCPs were randomly assigned to intervention (n=81) and control (n=80) arms. eConsultations were triggered on 130 patients from intervention arm PCPs. Intervention arm patients had a 0.89 (SD 1.45) decrease in HbA1c compared to 0.69 (SD 1.32) decrease in the control arm (p=0.28). There were significant differences in prescribing of glucose-lowering medications between arms. There was a 19.3% increase in patients prescribed GLP-1 RA or SGLT2i in the intervention arm compared to a 6.9% increase in control (p=0.003). There were also significant increases in prescription rates of metformin (3.1% vs -3.1%, p=0.03) and sulfonylureas (1.5% vs -6.9%, p=0.03). At 6-month follow-up, the intervention arm had 13 in-person endocrinology visits compared to 29 (p=0.012) in the control arm. PCPs were more likely to accept recommendations regarding adherence to or dose adjustment of current medications than initiation of new medications.
Conclusions: The implementation of an unsolicited endocrinology eConsult system for patients with poorly controlled T2DM is feasible. Unsolicited eConsultation was associated with increased prescribing of glucose-lowering medications without significant difference in HbA1c.
Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov registration: NCT03542084.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8971272 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-021-07157-x | DOI Listing |
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