Chronic Kidney Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
Evaluation on the Effects of a Brief Hope Intervention to the Decision Making in the Chinese Chronic Kidney Disease Patients on Their Management Options: a Randomised Controlled Trial
Introduction A Hong Kong study found that more than half of the chronic kidney disease (CKD)
patients declined peritoneal dialysis (PD) and preferred receiving palliative care, although
PD is vital for early preservation of residual kidney functions. Decision-making was found to
be influenced by feelings of hopelessness, leading to underestimation and the pursuit of a
successful plan of action. Cumulative evidences revealed that hope is a factor that heightens
positive expectations in patients, and could lead to consideration of wider alternatives and
thorough decision making.
Aim The aim of this study is to examine the effectiveness of a brief hope intervention in
reducing the decisional conflict and improving the quality of life of CKD patients who have
to plan for receiving dialysis therapy. If patients' quality of decision-making could be
improved, timely initiation dialysis and less decisional regret is expected.
Method This study is a single-blinded randomised controlled trial. On completion of the
baseline assessment and the screening procedure, eligible participants will be randomly
assigned in equal number into either the experimental group (education programme plus a brief
hope intervention) or the control group (education programme) using sets of
computer-generated random numbers.
Patients attending the outpatient renal clinic of a regional hospital in HK will be
approached. Stage 5 CKD patients (GRF equal to or less than 15) who are planned to receive
dialysis therapy or palliative care will be invited to join the study. Taking into
consideration of attrition and the health status of the palliative care patients, it was
appropriate to sign up 36 participants per arm, correlation alpha value 0.6, 0.5 effect size
with a power of 0.70.
There are four waves of data collection, which will be done before the commencement of the
intervention (T1), immediately post-intervention (T2) and one month (T3) and three months
(T4) after the completion of programme. Primary Outcomes include the assessing the patients'
decisional conflict, strength of preference, on their choice of treatment modalities between
peritoneal dialysis and palliative care, and health resources utilization. Secondary outcomes
measure hope level change and quality of life. Sociodemographic and socioeconomic information
will be collected. Two open-ended questions will be used to explore the perceived impact and
benefits of the intervention.
Decision Making in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease Patients with chronic kidney disease
(CKD) stage 5 (estimated creatinine clearance equal to or less than 15 mL/min/1.73 m2), would
face tough decisions on their treatment options when they were discovered to have end stage
renal disease (ESRD), as their decisions affected their long term QoL. In general, when
patients reach stage 4 CKD, taking into the account of the other symptoms and complications,
dialysis initiation would be discussed. Peritoneal dialysis (PD) first policy has been
adopted in the Hong Kong public health care system since 1985. It showed comparable patient
survival outcomes to haemodialyis and early preservation of residual kidney functions.
Nonetheless, a Hong Kong study found that more than half of these patients declined PD and
preferred receiving palliative care. For those who decided to have conservative treatment may
require urgent dialysis when their symptoms deteriorated such as dyspnoea. These patients may
have decisional regret and would like to revert their initial choice. As such, helping
patients to rigorously consider their preferences and concern is crucial.
Quality Decision Making Decision-making to commence or decline renal therapy in ESRD is a
complex and dynamic process and evolves over time. It was found that planned dialysis in
predialytic stage of CKD could reduce hospitalization duration, economic costs, mortality and
improves QoL and depression. Standard pre-dialysis consultations, providing information on
comparative risks, benefits and alternatives appeared inadequate to guide individualized
decisions that are affected by personal values and perceptions. In a similar vein, a
randomised control trial on asymptomatic abdominal aortic aneurysm on increasing patients'
knowledge about the disorder and better informed them about elective surgery or watchful
waiting did not reduce decisional conflict. Despite good knowledge, irrational choices were
made. Patients felt that they have autonomy and were offered a treatment alternative if the
consultation stimulated them to think of additional questions before making a decision. Some
patients tried to take control of their progressive status of renal failure, while others
tried to take control of their emotions. Determining the patients' readiness and facilitating
patients to express their struggles to make value congruent decisions require more than a
health education. Subsequent motivation after nephrology consultation become a vital step to
enable these patients to initiate planned dialysis.
The Importance of Hope to Quality Decision Making Hope theory is adopted as the framework in
the present study, where hope was believed as the central agent to facilitate the change
process. By increasing hope level, the likelihood of therapeutic change will be increased. It
is hypothesized that increasing hope would lead to selecting PD as recommended, stronger
decision to the treatment, less decisional conflict and reduced emergency room visits or
hospitalisation . Patients facing chronic illnesses would lead to psychological stress,
anxiety, depression, fear and hopelessness. Prognostic uncertainty, subjective perception of
a worsening health status, experience of quality of life, and even a sense of abandonment
were expressed in the patients with chronic kidney diseases. Both depression and hopelessness
was documented in renal failure patients. In a systematic review, cognitive appraisal was
also found to have the largest effect size that associate with depression in patients with
ESRD. Another systematic review and thematic synthesis also revealed five themes of concerns;
(1) invasive suffering, such as loss of independence, treatment burden and harm, (2) personal
vulnerability such as autonomy and dignity, (3) relational responsibility, for instance,
protecting others from grief, (4) existential tensions such as preserving self-identity, and
(5) preparedness, for example, decisional clarity, spirituality and hope. As such, both
cognitive and emotional strategies should be integrated to facilitate effective decision
making.
Despite the mechanisms by which positive emotions impact on decision making are not clearly
understood, it was found that positive affect leads to efficient and thorough decision-making
, that applied to physician's diagnostic process. It has been found that hope is one of the
diverse positive emotions, which could lead to consideration of wider alternatives. Thus, it
may lead to a more thorough exploration of the treatment options and consequences during the
decision making process. Evidence has shown that high-hope individuals were found to be more
creative and effective problem solvers. It is timely to translating these findings to wider
clinical perspectives to enhance quality decision-making. Whether improving the hopeful state
of patients with ESRF would lead to decrease decisional conflict or regrets remains under
explored. Investigating whether improving the hopeful state of CKD patients would lead to
better health outcomes will advance the application of hope in clinical interventions. The
present study aimed to investigate the effect of brief hope therapy on the patients with
stage 5 CKD when renal dialysis is recommended.
Hope Intervention Hope therapy that based on Snyder's conceptualization of hope is adopted in
the present study. Three core features: (1) goal setting (goals), (2) problem solving
(pathways) and (3) positive self-talk (agency), underlie the key hope strategies used in the
intervention. Hope therapy is delivered within the principles of cognitive behavioural
therapy (CBT), but its focus complemented the traditional CBT by shifting the primary focus
on positive potentials, thereby promoting meaning in life, fostering personal strengths and
positive changes. Despite the controversy about hope interventions lies on being overly
optimistic is harmful, nurturing hope was found to be one of the significant elements in
staying positive in the coping experiences of Chinese cancer patients. More importantly, hope
is a pursuit toward a desirable future openness to possibilities, affirmation and reflection
about one's capacity to reach self-established goals, and engagement in actions to make a
difference in the outcome.
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