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Increasing Decision Quality for Men With Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms

S

SingHealth Polyclinics

Status

Completed

Conditions

Patient Preference
Patient Engagement

Treatments

Behavioral: Physicians were not trained in shared decision making
Behavioral: Physicians trained in shared decision making

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04851275
2018/3106

Details and patient eligibility

About

In this study, the investigators show that by upskilling of primary care physicians (PCPs) in SDM and leveraging on a novel pictorial Visual Analogue Uroflowmetry Score (VAUS), they can enhance older men's recognition of LUTS and stimulated discussion with their PCPs.

Full description

Lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS), often related to prostatomegaly, is common but seldom sought medical attention amongst older men. Visual-aid and shared decision-making (SDM) are potential solutions to address LUTS. The study aimed to determine the effect of a novel pictorial Visual Analogue Uroflowmetry Score (VAUS) and primary care physicians (PCP) SDM training on the decisional quality amongst men selecting their treatment options for LUTS.

This study recruited 60 multi-ethnic Asian men aged ≥50 years with moderate-to-severe LUTS (International Prostate Symptoms Score≥8 and/or QOL≥3) in a Singapore public primary care clinic. Men used the VAUS to report their symptoms. 60 men were randomly assigned to PCPs trained in SDM in the intervention group (n=30) and the other 30 to the control group (PCPs without SDM-training). Patient-physician dyad decision quality was measured using the validated SDMQ-9 (patient) and SDMQ-Doc (physician) questionnaires.

Enrollment

60 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

50+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • men aged 50 years old and older attending the polyclinic for routine follow up of a chronic disease (non-communicable disease)
  • have moderate-to-severe LUTS and/or poor quality of life (QOL) as assessed by the validated International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS) of eight or more and/or its individual QOL score of three or more
  • men of any local Asian ethnicity and were willing to provide written consent
  • can communicate with their allocated PCP in either of the three main local languages; English, Mandarin or Malay.

Exclusion criteria

  • have indwelling catheters
  • urinary incontinence requiring diapers
  • anuria due to any renal pathology
  • gross hematuria
  • acute urinary retention
  • symptoms consistent with an acute urinary tract infection
  • existing treatment of LUTS or other prostate pathology
  • visual or hearing impairment which render men incapable of understanding the study procedure and providing informed consent
  • men unwilling to discuss their LUTS treatment options with their PCP

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

60 participants in 2 patient groups

Shared decision making for men with lower urinary tract symptoms
Experimental group
Description:
Participants used the Visual Analogue Uroflowmetry Score so report their symptoms and were attended by Primary Care Physicians trained in shared decision making
Treatment:
Behavioral: Physicians trained in shared decision making
No shared decision making for men with lower urinary tract symptoms
Active Comparator group
Description:
Participants did not use the Visual Analogue Uroflowmetry Score to report their symptoms and received usual care by Primary Care Physicians not trained in shared decision making
Treatment:
Behavioral: Physicians were not trained in shared decision making

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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