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Implementation of Teleophthalmology in Urban Health Systems Study

University of Wisconsin (UW) logo

University of Wisconsin (UW)

Status

Invitation-only

Conditions

Diabetic Retinopathy

Treatments

Other: Usual Care Teleophthalmology
Other: I-SITE Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05773495
Ophthalmology
2023-0019
1UG1EY032446 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study is being conducted to test the effectiveness of I-SITE (Implementation for Sustained Impact in Teleophthalmology), an implementation program to sustain increased diabetic eye screening rates using teleophthalmology in urban, multi-payer health systems.

Full description

The goal is to adapt I-SITE to a new population by identifying and testing strategies to overcome key barriers to teleophthalmology use among Latinos and Black Americans with diabetes.

The investigators will develop and test a culturally-adapted I-SITE intervention in urban, federally-qualified health centers serving low-income, Black and Latinx communities. The primary hypothesis is that the intervention will significantly increase the diabetic eye screening rate (primary outcome) at Access CHC and Outreach CHC at 6- and 12-months post-implementation compared to baseline. Secondary outcomes include monthly teleophthalmology use and follow-up rates for in-person eye care among screen positives. These data will facilitate rapid dissemination by helping key decision makers, such as health system administrators, determine whether to adopt the culturally-adapted I-SITE intervention.

The investigators are using a pre-post study design at each health system (site) to compare: (1) usual care teleophthalmology vs. the (2) I-SITE intervention.

  1. Usual Care Teleophthalmology: All sites will initially receive usual care teleophthalmology, consisting of having an active teleophthalmology program located in the primary care clinic and access to the I-SITE online toolkit. The I-SITE online toolkit has been freely-available since December 2019 to all U.S. health systems and the general public. Health systems may also contact the study team for assistance with technical issues. All sites will utilize non-mydriatic retinal cameras (e.g. Topcon NW400) located in their primary care clinic to obtain a single 45-degree photo of the disc and macula with an anterior photo in each eye to provide diabetic eye screening as part of patients' usual care. Images are captured by trained primary care personnel and securely transmitted to eye doctors for evaluation. This workflow is based on existing protocols and guidelines set by the American Telemedicine Association Practice Recommendations for Diabetic Retinopathy.
  2. I-SITE Intervention: Each site will subsequently receive all elements of usual care teleophthalmology plus the I-SITE implementation program. I-SITE is a coaching facilitated implementation program that guides clinical personnel through tailored integration of teleophthalmology into primary care workflows.

The I-SITE intervention includes:

  • Initial 30-minute live webinar introduction and question & answer session between the I-SITE Coach and the participating primary care clinics.
  • Two in-person 1-hour meetings between the I-SITE Coach and the local clinic team to discuss the teleophthalmology workflow, review current teleophthalmology use, diabetic eye screening rates, follow-up rates for in-person eye care among screen positives, set goals, and select implementation strategies to test. The meetings are to occur within 6 weeks after the introductory webinar.
  • A series of 10 monthly teleconferences (15-30 min.) following the in-person meetings where the I-SITE Coach and local clinic team test and refine implementation strategies by reviewing data and providing feedback.

Two I-SITE Coaches will be present at all meetings (i.e., lead and assistant coach) to ensure continuity in case the lead I-SITE Coach is unexpectedly unable to attend a meeting.

I-SITE Coaches will also perform a half-day, on-site visit to physically walkthrough the teleophthalmology workflow, as well as meet with clinic administrators and staff, on the date of the first in-person meeting.

Data Collection Procedures:

Patient data will be collected within the established electronic health record at each participating health system as part of routine patient care, de-identified, and exported for secondary data analysis by clinic personnel at each health system who already have full access to their patient data as part of their employment, and regularly gather and report this type of data to health insurers as part of their clinical role (e.g., clinical quality improvement and electronic health record/information technology staff ). Personnel from each participating health system will only have access to data from their own health system.

Enrollment

2,000 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Eligible medical records will be identified using ICD-10 codes for diabetes type 1 or type 2
  • Billing data will be identified using teleophthalmology (CPT codes 92228 or 92250)
  • Identification of eligible records will be performed by clinic personnel at each health system who already have full access to their patient data as part of their employment, and regularly gather and report this type of data to health insurers as part of their clinical role

Exclusion criteria

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Sequential Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

2,000 participants in 1 patient group

Usual Care Followed by I-SITE Intervention
Experimental group
Treatment:
Other: I-SITE Intervention
Other: Usual Care Teleophthalmology

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Yao Liu, MD, MS; Loren Lock, MS

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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