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Despite overwhelming need for effective HIV palliative care in sub-Saharan Africa, a systematic appraisal of the literature found almost no outcome or evaluative evidence.
Aim:
The investigators aim to evaluate the efficacy of HIV palliative care training and a simple palliative care assessment tool provided to nurses of patients on Antiretroviral Therapy (ART), and to evaluate this in terms of patient outcomes under clinical experimental conditions in 2 African countries using randomised controlled trial (RCT) designs.
Intervention being tested:
Within each well-established HIV ART clinic, patients will be randomly allocated to either continue receiving standard care (control group) or to receive standard care plus appointments with a clinic nurse trained in basic palliative care (intervention group).
Methods:
Design: Each Phase III clinical trial (i.e. one trial in each of 2 countries) will be powered and conducted in parallel to a common research design protocol, thus permitting evidence of outcomes that reflects 2 different ART providers, providing evidence of palliative care efficacy relevant to different HIV care settings.
Primary outcome: Each trial has been powered to a primary endpoint of pain control.
Secondary outcomes: The secondary outcomes are the core domains of palliative care as defined by the WHO (i.e. physical, including symptoms, psychological, social and spiritual) and measured by the APCA African POS. Further secondary outcomes measured will be: adherence to treatment; risk behaviours; health-related quality of life; psychological morbidity.
Inclusion: Patients will be screened and invited into the trial if they are on ART, score 3-5 on the 0-5 APCA African POS pain or symptom items, are 18 years or older, and can give informed consent to trial entry and data collection.
Analysis: An intention-to-treat analysis will be conducted to determine treatment response differences between the two conditions. In order to maximise the efficiency of longitudinal data, multi-level modelling will be applied as appropriate.
Full description
Background / rationale Despite overwhelming need for effective HIV palliative care in sub-Saharan Africa (as evidenced by the epidemiology of primarily HIV and cancer), a systematic appraisal of the literature found almost no outcome or evaluative evidence. Further systematic reviews of palliative care and HIV palliative care effectiveness have found the evidence to have been generated mainly in high income countries, before the advent of antiretroviral therapy (ART) and the evidence from Africa to be of generally lower quality (i.e. non-trial data) with limited potential for inclusion in evidence-based health care planning and delivery. In order to influence clinical practice, policy and guidelines, it is essential to provide high quality trial evidence of the effectiveness of palliative care for people on ART. In order to achieve the goal of maximum coverage, the capacity building of existing HIV care services to provide palliative care to their patients seems the most feasible. Further, the evidence demonstrates that the pain and symptom burden of those on ART is not different to those not on ART, therefore a key role for palliative care may be in the support of those accessing treatment. Our proposed study will develop a model of care that extends palliative care delivery into existing HIV/ART delivery sites, offering a mechanism of greater coverage and feasibility than alternative approaches such as referral of all palliative care-related problems out to specialist external providers.
Primary outcome: Each trial has been powered to a primary endpoint of pain control.
Secondary outcomes: The secondary outcomes are the core domains of palliative care as defined by the WHO (i.e. physical, including symptoms, psychological, social and spiritual) and measured by the APCA African POS. Further secondary outcomes measured will be: adherence to treatment; risk behaviours; health-related quality of life; and an additional measure of psychological morbidity.
The primary and secondary outcomes are the same for each country's trial.
This study aims to reject the null hypothesis that receipt of palliative care in addition to standard care does not affect pain compared to those receiving standard care alone.
Inclusion: Patients will be screened and invited into the trial if they are on ART, score 3-5 on the 0-5 APCA African POS pain or symptom items, are 18 years or older, and can give informed consent to trial entry and data collection.
Analysis: An intention-to-treat analysis will be conducted to determine treatment response differences between the two conditions. In order to maximise the efficiency of longitudinal data, multi-level modelling will be applied as appropriate.
The revised CONSORT trial statement for non-drug trials has been applied to ensure potential publication in the leading 400 medical journals.
In terms of a clinical and policy audience for the findings, the inclusion of 2 partner countries enables us to demonstrate the efficacy of 2 providers of ART care (as there is much heterogeneity between HIV care providers in Africa), and to maximise the ability to replicate findings, while dissemination will describe and compare the two providers of care delivered.
In addition to journal publications, we intend to present summary outputs to relevant Country Teams / policy / advocacy stakeholders, to present to international HIV / palliative care conference audiences, and to provide a podcast of findings to be freely downloaded on the web.
Co-applicants and Collaborators This application represents a highly effective and proven group who have, over the past 5 years, delivered clinical audit, POS tool development and validation, longitudinal studies, and various patient outcome studies in HIV palliative care in Africa. The University departments are those most closely aligned to the palliative care field in each country, and offer an active clinical / teaching / research interface. The collaboration has a strong track record of successfully conducting clinical and public health research and in clinical care. Each collaborating training palliative care centre is a long standing recognised provider of quality palliative care, operating in line with the WHO definition of palliative care.
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240 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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