A digital medicine offering reduced systolic blood pressure by an additional 9.1 mm Hg at 4 weeks compared to usual care in patients with uncontrolled hypertension and type 2 diabetes.
RCT (n=109)
Open-label
Cluster-randomized
Yes
Does a digital medicine offering improve systolic blood pressure in patients with uncontrolled hypertension and type 2 diabetes?
A digital medicine offering that tracks medication ingestion and physical activity significantly improved blood pressure and glycemic control in patients with uncontrolled hypertension and type 2 diabetes.
Mean Difference: -9.1 (95% CI -14–-3.3)
Absolute Event Rate: -21.8% vs -12.7%
BACKGROUND: Hypertension and type 2 diabetes mellitus are major modifiable risk factors for cardiac, cerebrovascular, and kidney diseases. Reasons for poor disease control include nonadherence, lack of patient engagement, and therapeutic inertia. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to assess the impact on clinic-measured blood pressure (BP) and glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) using a digital medicine offering (DMO) that measures medication ingestion adherence, physical activity, and rest using digital medicines (medication taken with ingestible sensor), wearable sensor patches, and a mobile device app. METHODS: Participants with elevated systolic BP (SBP ≥140 mm Hg) and HbA1c (≥7%) failing antihypertensive (≥2 medications) and oral diabetes therapy were enrolled in this three-arm, 12-week, cluster-randomized study. Participants used DMO (includes digital medicines, the wearable sensor patch, and the mobile device app) for 4 or 12 weeks or received usual care based on site randomization. Providers in the DMO arms could review the DMO data via a Web portal. In all three arms, providers were instructed to make medical decisions (medication titration, adherence counseling, education, and lifestyle coaching) on all available clinical information at each visit. Primary outcome was change in SBP at week 4. Other outcomes included change in SBP and HbA1c at week 12, and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) at weeks 4 and 12, as well as proportion of patients at BP goal (<140/90 mm Hg) at weeks 4 and 12, medical decisions, and medication adherence patterns. RESULTS: Final analysis included 109 participants (12 sites; age: mean 58. 7, SD years; female: 49. 5%, 54/109; Hispanic: 45. 9%, 50/109; income ≤ US 20, 000: 56. 9%, 62/109; and ≤ high school education: 52. 3%, 57/109). The DMO groups had 80 participants (7 sites) and usual care had 29 participants (5 sites). At week 4, DMO resulted in a statistically greater SBP reduction than usual care (mean -21. 8, SE 1. 5 mm Hg vs mean -12. 7, SE 2. 8 mmHg; mean difference -9. 1, 95% CI -14. 0 to -3. 3 mm Hg) and maintained a greater reduction at week 12. The DMO groups had greater reductions in HbA1c, DBP, and LDL-C, and a greater proportion of participants at BP goal at weeks 4 and 12 compared with usual care. The DMO groups also received more therapeutic interventions than usual care. Medication adherence was ≥80% while using the DMO. The most common adverse event was a self-limited rash at the wearable sensor site (12%, 10/82). CONCLUSIONS: For patients failing hypertension and diabetes oral therapy, this DMO, which provides dose-by-dose feedback on medication ingestion adherence, can help lower BP, HbA1c, and LDL-C, and promote patient engagement and provider decision making. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinicaltrials. gov NCT02827630; https: //clinicaltrials. gov/show/NCT02827630 (Archived by WebCite at http: //www. webcitation. org/6rL8dW2VF).
Frías et al. (Tue,) conducted a rct in Uncontrolled Hypertension and Type 2 Diabetes (n=109). Digital medicine offering (DMO) vs. Usual care was evaluated on Change in systolic blood pressure (SBP) from baseline to week 4 (MD -9.1, 95% CI -14.0 to -3.3). A digital medicine offering reduced systolic blood pressure by an additional 9.1 mm Hg at 4 weeks compared to usual care in patients with uncontrolled hypertension and type 2 diabetes.