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Access to Kidney Transplantation in Minority Populations (AKT-MP)

University of New Mexico (UNM) logo

University of New Mexico (UNM)

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Kidney Diseases

Treatments

Other: Kidney Transplant Fast Track (KTFT)
Other: Peer Navigation (PN)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04615819
20-387 AKT-MP

Details and patient eligibility

About

Hispanic/Latino (HL) and American Indian (AI) patients are more likely than whites to have kidney failure, but less likely to complete transplant evaluation or receive a kidney transplant (KT), the best treatment for kidney failure. Using comparative effectiveness research methods, we will conduct a pragmatic randomized trial to compare the efficacy and cost- effectiveness of two approaches to help HL and AI patients overcome barriers to completing transplant evaluation and receiving a KT: a streamlined KT evaluation process and a peer-assisted evaluation program; and, we will determine best practices to assist other transplant centers in implementing the better program. Findings from this work may help reduce disparities in transplant evaluation and KT.

Full description

The AKT-MP study will assess whether Kidney Transplant Fast Track (KTFT), a streamlined KT evaluation process, or peer navigators (PN) who were former KT patients to help patients "navigate" their way through KT evaluation, can help vulnerable patients with kidney failure overcome barriers to transplant listing. After culturally and contextually adapting the two interventions, we will use a comparative effectiveness (CER) approach to conduct a pragmatic randomized trial of 398 kidney failure patients to compare the efficacy and effectiveness of the two approaches in disadvantaged groups at a university-affiliated transplant center with large HL and AI kidney failure patient populations, and we will compare results to historic comparison populations (local and national). We will assess facilitators and barriers to widespread implementation and conduct a cost effectiveness analysis. Although it is expected that KTFT will be more effective than PN, KTFT may also be more costly, requiring significant administrative and clinical changes in the transplant center, which may be impractical to maintain. Further, KTFT may lead to more patient ambivalence because the shortened evaluation period will give them less time to consider their treatment options. Thus, an important aspect of the proposed study is to comparative the effectiveness of the two methods. Ultimately, our study will inform transplant programs faced with disparities in KT about which disparity-reducing intervention to use given their particular needs and resources.

Enrollment

398 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Undergoing kidney transplant evaluation at the University of New Mexico
  • Greater than or equal to 18 years of age
  • Mentally competent

Exclusion criteria

  • Children less than 18 years of age are excluded because all research-related measurements are designed for patients over the age of 18. Children less than 18 years of age have dissimilar decision-making authority as a result of their developmental stage and dependency on adult guardians who must make all their transplant-related decisions, as required by all pediatric transplant centers. The proposed study focuses only on adult transplant patients.
  • Waitlisted at another transplant center
  • Prior kidney transplant
  • Incarcerated patients
  • Pregnant women
  • Active systemic infection
  • Non-skin malignancy or melanoma in the past 2 years
  • Known cognitive impairment

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

398 participants in 2 patient groups

Arm 1
Experimental group
Description:
KTFT
Treatment:
Other: Kidney Transplant Fast Track (KTFT)
Arm 2
Experimental group
Description:
PN
Treatment:
Other: Peer Navigation (PN)

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Nila S Judd, BA

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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