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Community Pharmacy-Based Prescription Drug Monitoring Program Opioid Risk Assessment Tool (PharmTool)

Utah System of Higher Education (USHE) logo

Utah System of Higher Education (USHE)

Status

Begins enrollment this month

Conditions

Opioid Abuse
Prescription Opioid Abuse

Treatments

Behavioral: Clinical Decision Support Tool (Moderate Risk)
Other: Standard of Care
Behavioral: Clinical Decision Support Tool (High Risk)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05706311
3UG1DA049444-04S2 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
CTN-0138

Details and patient eligibility

About

This goal of this observational study is to develop and test the Opioid Risk Reduction Clinical Decision Support (ORRCDS) tool. The tool will be an opioid medication risk screener and decision support platform that will be used by pharmacists upon dispensing prescription opioid medication. Once the Opioid Risk Reduction has been developed, we will examine the impact of the ORRCDS within two divisions of a large chain retail pharmacy. Pharmacies will be randomized to using the Opioid Risk Reduction Clinical Decision Support (ORRCDS) tool or standard of care opioid dispensation. We hypothesize that patients at pharmacies randomized to the ORRCDS tool will be more likely to reduce their risk status to low or moderate compared to the patients at standard of care pharmacies.

Full description

In our previous research, patients have reported a willingness to answer questions and discuss opioid medication use with pharmacists in these settings. Therefore, community pharmacy settings are an underused resource with great promise for screening and engaging patients to reduce opioid medication misuse. Currently, prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMP) are the most available tool to pharmacists for monitoring opioid use among patients. As a result, PDMP users must rely on their "best judgment" in clinical decision-making and often provide patient care and referrals with a limited evidence base. The question of highest importance in the field of prescription medication misuse is: How can PDMP information/output be most usefully utilized for patient intervention within an evidence-based opioid risk reduction clinical decision support (ORRCDS) tool.

This study will develop and test the Opioid Risk Reduction Clinical Decision Support (ORRCDS) tool and examining facilitators and barriers to sustainability and broader dissemination. The study is organized into 3 aims:

Aim 1: ORRCDS Tool development which will include a universal opioid medication risk screener and decision support platform.

Aim 2: Once the ORRCDS has been developed, we will conduct a type-1 cluster 2-arm randomized trial to examine the impact of the ORRCDS tool within two divisions of a large chain retail pharmacy. We hypothesize that patients with moderate or high opioid risk will be more likely to reduce risk status to low or moderate following ORRCDS implementation compared to standard care.

Aim 3: Following the completion of the cluster randomized trial, qualitative interviews will be conducted with pharmacists and leaders from a large chain retail pharmacy and PDMP vendor about the potential barriers and facilitators to the sustainability (continued use at the stores in this project) and broader dissemination (implementation at other stores outside of those in this project) of the ORRCDS.

Enrollment

80 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • A large chain retail pharmacy chain in the Cincinnati or Columbus, Ohio area

Exclusion criteria

  • None

This study does not involve individual patients as randomization will occur among pharmacies.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

80 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention Pharmacy Site
Experimental group
Description:
Pharmacies randomized to the experimental arm will be exposed to the intervention condition. Patients at the intervention pharmacy identified as at elevated risk will receive confirmatory screening for opioid risk. Those with confirmed moderate risk will receive a brief motivational intervention for medication misuse and an offer of naloxone dispensation. Those with high risk will receive a brief motivational intervention leading to warm handoff treatment linkage intervention to primary or specialty substance use care with an offer for naloxone dispensation.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Clinical Decision Support Tool (High Risk)
Behavioral: Clinical Decision Support Tool (Moderate Risk)
Control Pharmacy Site
Other group
Description:
Standard of Care is the treatment as usual condition, which follows federal and Ohio state pharmacy requirements for pharmacists where in patients filling prescriptions receive information and opt-in counseling. Ohio State law requires pharmacist to not dispense an opioid supply \>90 days, with a specific prohibition on dispensations ≥14 days after prescriptions are issued. Pharmacists are also required to perform a universal prescription drug medication review before initial dispensation and offer brief counseling (e.g., unstandardized information about medication safety) for new/modified prescription therapies.
Treatment:
Other: Standard of Care

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Nicole Mauerman, MS; Jerry Cochran, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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