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Improving Adherence to COPD Treatments in Primary Care

T

Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center

Status

Invitation-only

Conditions

COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease)
Adherence to Care

Treatments

Behavioral: COPD-care seminar

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07104136
0195-24-COM1

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether a special training program for primary care doctors can help improve treatment adherence and overall outcomes for people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

The main questions it aims to answer are:

  • Does the training program help patients with COPD take their medications more regularly?
  • Does it reduce the number of COPD flare-ups (exacerbations)?
  • Does it improve how well doctors follow current treatment guidelines for COPD?

In this study:

  • Primary care doctors will be randomly assigned to either receive the training or continue their usual care without intervention.
  • The training includes updated information about COPD, a workshop on inhaler use, and a course on motivational interviewing (a method to support behavior change)
  • The care of their patients with COPD will be reviewed over 12 months to see if the program made a difference in medication use, flare-ups, and other outcomes.

Full description

The investigators hypothesize that a primary care physician-directed intervention, consisting of a seminar with up-to-date professional guidance and motivational interviewing course, would result in patients' higher adherence to treatment, improved care, and fewer COPD exacerbations.

The study aims:

  1. To evaluate the effect of specific COPD patient centric educational program for primary care physicians on adherence to recommended therapy.
  2. To evaluate the effect of specific COPD patient centric educational program for primary care physicians on the number of moderate and severe COPD exacerbations.

This is a two-arm, parallel, randomized controlled trial conducted in a primary care setting, involving primary care physicians. All physicians will sign an informed consent form to participate.

The study will include two groups:

  1. Intervention Group - Twenty primary care physicians will be recruited. After inclusion and signing an informed consent, all physicians will participate in a two-day seminar. The seminar will include: up-to-date professional guidance on COPD management, an inhalers workshop and a course of motivational interview. The physicians will undergo a refresher workshop 3 months after entering the study, and visual and informative newsletter will be sent to them every 3 months.
  2. Control Group - Twenty primary care physicians, matched to the intervention group by sociodemographic area and number of COPD patients in past year.

The effect of the intervention will be assessed based on the outcomes of all COPD patients that visited one of the physicians in the intervention/control groups during the first 6 months after study initiation. These patients will be identified retrospectively from medical charts. Assessment of patient care and outcomes will be analyzed retrospectively, 18 months after study initiation (end of study), addressing each patient's first 12 months from first relevant clinic visit.

Randomization of primary care physicians to each group will be performed with stratification to the number of registered individual COPD patients for each physician. In addition, randomization will be performed with blocks of clinics from areas of similar sociodemographic characteristics.

COPD medication adherence rates vary by geographic location but are usually around 25-30%. Based on previous research, the investigators conservatively assume that our intervention will lead to an absolute 17% increase in adherence during the 12 months from first follow-up. Considering the above, to achieve an alpha of 0.05 and a power of 80%, there is a need for 127 patients in each group. Given that participating primary care physicians must have seen at least 18 individual COPD patients in the past year, and assuming a similar rate of visits during the follow-up period, along with a 15-20% loss-to-follow-up due to changes in the treating physician, the investigators estimate that 20 primary care physicians will be needed in each group.

Enrollment

40 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Primary care physicians
  • Have at least 18 COPD patients in his unit as documented in medical records

Exclusion criteria

  • Refusal to sign informed consent to participate in the study.
  • Less than 1-year projection of employment in current clinic.
  • Prior completion of a course in motivational interviewing.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

40 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
In the study, primary care physicians assigned to the intervention group will participate in a two-day seminar led by senior pulmonology specialists and family medicine specialists. The seminar will cover the following topic: Understanding COPD and current guidelines, inhaler technique and device selection, cardiovascular diseases in patients with COPD and possible interventions, motivational interview seminar, and two workshops for simulation and practice. The physicians will undergo a refresher workshop 3 months after entering the study, and visual and informative newsletter will be sent to them every 3 months.
Treatment:
Behavioral: COPD-care seminar
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Primary care physicians that will be included without any intervention.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Amir Bar-Shai, MD; Hanny Yeshua, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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