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Electronically delivered, cardiovascular-focused messaging to improve influenza vaccination: Rationale, design, and baseline characteristics of the Kaiser Permanente VACCination Improvement with Nudge-based CardiovAscular Targeted Engagement (KP-VACCINATE) Megatrial - 27/08/25

Doi : 10.1016/j.ahj.2025.06.007 
Ankeet S. Bhatt, MD, MBA, ScM a, b, , Alan S. Go, MD a, c, d, Rishi V. Parikh, MPH a, b, Zoe Ballance, MPH a, Thida C. Tan, MPH a, Ben J. Marafino, PhD a, c, Haihong Hu, MS, MPH e, Mark Mummert, BA e, Andrew P. Ambrosy, MD, MPH a, c, Gerardo Hernandez-Diaz, BS e, Rebecca Fitch, MD e, Svasti Patel, MD f, Tor Biering-Sørensen, MS, MSc, MPH, PhD g, h, Brian L. Claggett, PhD i, Niklas Dyrby Johansen, MD, PhD g, h, Alexis Jones, MSHCM e, Ivy A. Ku, MD f, Scott D. Solomon, MD i, Muthiah Vaduganathan, MD, MPH i, Benjamin Z. Galper, MD e, Kristine L. Lee, MD f, Natalia C. Berry, MD, MBA e, j
on behalf of the

KP-VACCINATE Investigators

a Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Pleasanton, CA 
b Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA 
c Department of Health System Science, Kaiser Permanente Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine, Pasadena, CA 
d Departments of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine, University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 
e Mid Atlantic Permanente Medical Group, Kaiser Permanente Mid Atlantic States & Mid-Atlantic Permanente Research Institute, Washington, DC 
f The Permanente Medical Group, Pleasanton, CA 
g Department of Cardiology, Copenhagen University Hospital-Herlev and Gentofte, Copenhagen, Denmark 
h Center for Translational Cardiology and Pragmatic Randomized Trials, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark 
i Cardiovascular Division, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 
j Cardiovascular Division, Dartmouth Health, Geisel School of Medicine, Hanover, NH 

Reprint requests: Ankeet S. Bhatt, MD, MBA, ScM, Kaiser Permanente San Francisco Medical Center, Kaiser Permanente Northern California Division of Research, Pleasanton, CA 94588. Kaiser Permanente San Francisco Medical Center Kaiser Permanente Northern California Division of Research Pleasanton CA 94588

ABSTRACT

Background

Despite strong evidence of clinical benefit, influenza vaccination rates remain suboptimal in the United States. Randomized trials suggest that behavioral nudges may improve vaccination rates, particularly when messaging includes language on the potential cardiovascular (CV) benefits of vaccination. Whether these nudges are effective in a diverse US population is unknown.

Purpose

The Kaiser Permanente VACCination Improvement with Nudge-based CardiovAscular Targeted Engagement (KP-VACCINATE) study tested the effectiveness and timing of electronically-delivered health system messaging highlighting the potential CV benefits of vaccination (CV-focused communication) vs usual care communication on influenza vaccination uptake across two integrated healthcare delivery systems.

Methods

KP-VACCINATE is a multicenter, randomized controlled megatrial conducted across Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC) and Mid Atlantic States (KPMAS) during the 2024-2025 influenza season. Unvaccinated adults aged >18 years and able to be contacted via health system-based secure messaging or email were included. Eligible participants were randomized at KPNC and KPMAS in a 1:1:1:1 fashion to 4 study arms, corresponding to messaging type (CV-focused communication or usual care communication) at two sequential touchpoints (initial letter and subsequent reminder letter). The primary outcome was receipt of influenza vaccination on or before January 1, 2025. There were 6 coprimary comparisons to estimate the effects of nudging content and timing: (1) Arms 1, 2, and 3 vs Arm 4 (CV nudge vs usual care; three comparisons), (2) Arm 1 vs Arm 2 (two vs one round of CV nudging), (3) Arm 2 vs Arm 3 (early vs late CV nudging), and (4) pooled Arms 1 to 3 vs Arm 4 (any CV nudge vs usual care). A prespecified secondary outcome was time to vaccination. Exploratory outcomes included major adverse CV events and all-cause death.

Results

A total of 3,668,428 members were randomized (3,234,745 from KPNC, 433,683 from KPMAS). Randomized participants had a mean (SD) age of 48.3 (18.2) years, 1,939,380 (52.9%) were female, 386,33 (10.5%) were Black, 791,658 (21.6%) were Asian and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander. Hispanic ethnicity was documented in 774,790 (21.1%) of participants. The vaccination rate using available documentation in the prior 2023-2024 influenza season was 38.8%. Presence of cardiometabolic comorbidities including heart failure, diabetes, and hypertension approximated that of US adult population. Primary and key secondary outcomes will be ascertained from electronic health records and linked data sources through January 1, 2025. Exploratory outcomes will be assessed through August 31, 2025. Implementation outcomes (read receipts, email hyperlink click-throughs) will also be assessed in an exploratory fashion.

Conclusions

KP-VACCINATE is one of the largest clinical trials conduted to date, enrolling more than 3.6 million adults, and uniquely embedded in a integrated healthcare delivery system. It will evaluate the effectiveness and optimal timing of CV-focused vs usual care messaging in increasing influenza vaccination through standard health system outreach across a diverse US population. Findings will inform future public health messaging and demonstrate large-scale, pragmatic randomization within learning healthcare systems.

Trial Registration

Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT06571747.

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