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Organs for transplantation remain a scarce and precious resource with over 5000 patients currently on the kidney transplant waiting list. A kidney transplant costs approximately £17,000 in the first year and £5,000 per subsequent year. If the transplant fails, the patient must return to dialysis at an estimated cost of £30,800 per year or be retransplanted. While short term outcomes have improved steadily over the last 15-20 years, longer term outcomes haven't and after 10 years approximately 30% of kidney transplants have failed. Nonadherence to immunosuppressive medication is increasingly being associated with these poor long term outcomes and studies have estimated that 30- 50% of transplant patients are nonadherent to their immunosuppressive medication. The investigators want to determine whether immunosuppression medication adherence can be improved in a group of patients receiving tailored medication adherence support form a pharmacist. Adherence support will be provided for one year and will be individualised to each patient in the intervention group after identifying both their practical and perceptual barriers to adherence. The adherence interventions offered may include additional education and medication counselling, setting alarms, provision of a medication list, the use of a medications adherence app on a smart phone, reducing the number and frequency of tablets a patient takes or referral on to another health professional such as a social worker or psychologist for additional support. A range of clinical outcomes will be assessed for all patients on a regular basis in order to determine whether the provision of effective medication adherence support for the kidney transplant patients may help to optimise the long-term outcomes of these transplants
Full description
This study will be undertaken using a prospective, multidimensional design. 42 nonadherent kidney transplant patients will be included in the intervention group. The nonadherent patients will be identified through Imperial College Renal and Transplant Centre (ICRTC) Outpatient Clinic based at Hammersmith Hospital. Standard and transplant specific demographics will be collected for all patients. All kidney transplant patients have their tacrolimus levels measured at each clinic visit. The variability of these levels can be used as a marker of their adherence. Patients with a high intrapatient variability (IPV) of their levels are said to be nonadherent. The Chief Investigator or another member of the research team will approach individual patients directly in the transplant out-patient clinic where they are members of the multidisciplinary clinical care team. The Chief Investigator or another member of the research team may also telephone patients to invite them to clinic to discuss participation in the trial. The Chief Investigator or another member of the research team will describe the study to the patient, answer any questions they have and provide them with a participant information sheet (PIS). Patients will be given the opportunity to take the PIS away and think about whether they would like to participate. A follow up discussion either in clinic or on the phone will be arranged with the patient to answer any queries they have within two weeks of providing them with the PIS; during that discussion, the Chief Investigator or other member of the research team will arrange an appointment in the transplant clinic with the patient to sign the consent form if they do decide to participate. Patients recruited into the study will receive pharmacist led, patient tailored interventions to improve immunosuppressant medication adherence. Patients will be included in the study for one year from recruitment.
The pharmacist led, patient tailored intervention will involve regular, intensive, personalised support from a pharmacist to improve adherence to immunosuppressive medications. The pharmacist will meet with the patient on a regular basis in the transplant clinic to identify their perceptual and practical barriers to adherence and agree a support plan that is tailored to them.
Within the first two weeks of recruitment, the study pharmacist will meet with the patient in transplant clinic to:
This first visit will provide a baseline assessment of the patient's medication adherence.
Tailored support may include:
The structure of each follow up adherence review will be the same as the first formal adherence review with the exception that the BMQ will only be repeated at the end of the one year follow-up and the socioeconomic and educational assessment will only be undertaken at the first assessment review. Every patient will have a formal adherence assessment at recruitment and then at 3, 6, 9 and 12 months. At the end of one year of follow-up, the specific benefits perceived by the patient of intensive adherence support from a pharmacist will be determined through a questionnaire.
Baseline nonadherence will be measured at the first visit with the study pharmacist within two weeks of recruitment and then at 3, 6, 9 and 12 months. The IPV of their tacrolimus levels and their outpatient clinic nonattendance rate will be measured retrospectively in the 12 months prior to recruitment to the study and then prospectively at the end of the intervention year. The IPV is calculated from the tacrolimus levels measured for an individual patient using the coefficient of variance mathematical formula - Coefficient of variance (COV) defined as: SD x 100 / Mean. The outpatient clinic nonattendance for each participant will be taken from the hospital integrated computer system.
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42 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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