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The TEACH patient cohort will characterize a clinic sample of HIV-infected patients on chronic opioid therapy (COT) by describing basic demographics and health status, including characteristics of pain (severity and interference), aberrant behaviors/misuse of COT, substance use and trust/satisfaction with providers. In addition, data on a subset of participants will be used to supplement analysis of secondary outcomes for the TEACH randomized controlled trial (RCT), an intervention study directed at COT providers (outlined in a separate Clinical Trials Protocol Registration and Results (PRS) summary).
Full description
The TEACH patient cohort study is multi-site and will be conducted at Boston Medical Center and Grady Memorial Hospital. It will involve recruiting and consenting HIV-infected patients on chronic opioid therapy (COT) to be participants in an observational study. The patient cohort will characterize a clinic sample of HIV-infected patients on COT by describing basic demographics and health status, including characteristics of pain (severity and interference), aberrant behaviors/misuse of COT, substance use and trust/satisfaction with providers. Participation in the study will involve completing one baseline and one follow-up assessment. The follow-up assessment will take place approximately 12 months after the baseline assessment. Both the baseline and follow-up assessments will be conducted at the clinical site, and a single signed consent form will be obtained for both visits. A similar assessment instrument will be used at baseline and follow-up. Additional health information will be collected from the medical record.
There are two distinct components to the TEACH study. The patient cohort component, which is outlined in this Clinical Trials PRS summary, will involve recruiting and consenting patients in the HIV clinic on COT to be participants in an observational study. The intervention, outlined in a separate Clinical Trials PRS summary, will involve consenting physicians as participants in a randomized controlled trial of an intervention and, via a waiver of informed consent, extracting patient level data on the physicians' patients from the electronic medical record. Data on a subset of observational cohort participants will be used to supplement analysis of secondary outcomes for the intervention (i.e. those patients whose providers were enrolled).
The TEACH patient cohort component seeks to inform physicians and other providers about patients who use chronic opioid therapy, including valuable information on the effect of the COT prescriber-directed intervention on patients. This knowledge will guide both prescribers and patients in improving care and reducing risks associated with chronic opioid therapy.
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170 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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