Activating peripheral arterial disease patients to reduce cholesterol: A randomized trial

  • Mary M. McDermott
  • , George Reed
  • , Philip Greenland
  • , Kathy M. Mazor
  • , Sherry Pagoto
  • , Judith K. Ockene
  • , Rex Graff
  • , Philip A. Merriam
  • , Kathy Leung
  • , Larry Manheim
  • , Melina R. Kibbe
  • , Barbara Olendzki
  • , William H. Pearce
  • , Ira S. Ockene

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

24 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Peripheral arterial disease patients are less likely than other high-risk patients to achieve ideal low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels. This randomized controlled trial assessed whether a telephone counseling intervention, designed to help peripheral arterial disease patients request more intensive cholesterol-lowering therapy from their physician, achieved lower LDL cholesterol levels than 2 control conditions. Methods: There were 355 peripheral arterial disease participants with baseline LDL cholesterol <70 mg/dL enrolled. The primary outcome was change in LDL cholesterol level at 12-month follow-up. There were 3 parallel arms: telephone counseling intervention, attention control condition, and usual care. The intervention consisted of patient-centered counseling, delivered every 6 weeks, encouraging participants to request increases in cholesterol-lowering therapy from their physician. The attention control condition consisted of telephone calls every 6 weeks providing information only. The usual care condition participated in baseline and follow-up testing. Results: At 12-month follow-up, participants in the intervention improved their LDL cholesterol level, compared with those in attention control (-18.4 mg/dL vs -6.8 mg/dL, P = .010) but not compared with those in usual care (-18.4 mg/dL vs -11.1 mg/dL, P = .208). Intervention participants were more likely to start a cholesterol-lowering medication or increase their cholesterol-lowering medication dose than those in the attention control (54% vs 18%, P = .001) and usual care (54% vs 31%, P <.001) conditions. Conclusion: Telephone counseling that helped peripheral arterial disease patients request more intensive cholesterol-lowering therapy from their physician achieved greater LDL cholesterol decreases than an attention control arm that provided health information alone.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)557-565
Number of pages9
JournalAmerican Journal of Medicine
Volume124
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2011
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Intermittent claudication
  • Peripheral arterial disease
  • Secondary prevention

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