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Effects of Communication Training to Involve Older People in Decisions to DEPRESCRIBE Cardiometabolic Medication: a Cluster-randomized Trial in Primary Care (CO-DEPRESCRIBE)

U

University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG)

Status

Invitation-only

Conditions

Polypharmacy
Decision Making, Shared
Primary Health Care
Community Pharmacy Services
Deprescriptions

Treatments

Other: communication training programme for healthcare providers

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05507177
10140022010002 (Other Grant/Funding Number)
10506

Details and patient eligibility

About

The researchers will investigate the effects of a communication training for community pharmacists and general physicians that aims to make it easier for them to stop or lower medication for cardiovascular disease and/or diabetes in older patients.

The researchers expect that trained community pharmacists and general physicians will stop or lower medication for cardiovascular disease and/or diabetes in more patients compared to untrained community pharmacists and general physicians.

The researchers will recruit local teams consisting of a community pharmacist and one or more general physician, and allocate each team to either group I or group II. All teams in group I are first being trained, before they conduct a study-specific clinical medication review in 10 patients per team. All teams in group II will first conduct a more general clinical medication review in 10 patients per team too, before receiving the training. Patients will only be included after meeting in- and exlcusion criteria and signing an informed consent form. During the conduct of the study, the researchers will collect patient reported data and data on the conduct of the medication reviews. Retrospectively, the researchers will also collect data on the medication use of the patients from the pharmacy information system and specific medical data related to cardiometabolic disease of the patients from the physician's information system. The researchers will also assess the total costs and benefits of the intervention, and evaluate the training for the purpose of future implementation.

Full description

RESEARCH QUESTION: The researchers will investigate the effects of a communication training program for community pharmacists and general physicians, that aims to facilitate stopping or lowering the prescription of medication for cardiovascular disease and/or diabetes in older patients.

HYPOTHESIS: The researchers expect that the training program will lead to more proactive stopping or lowering the prescription of medication for cardiovascular disease and/or diabetes, and that patients will be more involved in the decision to stop or lower.

STUDY DESIGN: The researchers will conduct a cluster-randomized trial in which 44 pharmacist-general practice teams in the Netherlands will be randomized to conducting medication reviews with 10 eligible patients as usual (control) or after receiving the deprescribing communication training program (intervention). STUDY POPULATION: People of 75 years and older using specific cardiometabolic medication and eligible for a medication review in The Netherlands will be included.

INTERVENTION: The training program is based on previous work and applies models for patient-centered communication and shared decision making. The training consists of 5 modules with supportive tools.

OUTCOME MEASURES: Primary outcome is the proportion of patients with deintensified cardiometabolic medication.

Secondary outcomes include patient involvement in decision-making, healthcare professional communication skills assessed by the patient, medication-related outcomes, attitudes towards deprescribing, medication regimen complexity and health-related quality of life. Additional safety and cost parameters will be collected.

SAMPLE SIZE/DATA-ANALYSIS: Based on a pilot study, the researchers have estimated that 167 patients are needed per study arm in the final intention-to-treat analysis using a mixed effects model. Taking loss to follow-up into account, 40 teams need to recruit 10 patients each. The researchers will conduct a baseline and a 6-months follow-up assessment, a process evaluation using the RE-AIM framework, and a cost effectiveness analysis.

Enrollment

400 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

75+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria for the patients that receive a clinical medication review as part of the study:

  • 75 years or older

  • eligible for a clinical medication review according to the Dutch guidlines

  • using one or more of the following medications:

    a) sulfonylurea derivative; (b) insulin; (c) any 2 glucose-regulating medications; (d) any 2 blood pressure-lowering medications; (e) statin

  • managed and monitored by one of the participating HCP teams

Exclusion criteria for the patients that receive a clinical medication review as part of the study:

  • diagnosed with type I diabetes
  • not understanding Dutch language
  • not giving or not able to give informed consent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

400 participants in 2 patient groups

Group I
Experimental group
Description:
patients that are treated in group I receive a medication review from healthcare providers that have already received the communication training programme
Treatment:
Other: communication training programme for healthcare providers
Group II
No Intervention group
Description:
patients that are treated in group II receive a medication review from healthcare providers that have not yet received the communication training programme

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Peter Stuijt, MSc

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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