Diabetes Clinical Trial
Official title:
China-JD Program: A Multi-centre Demonstration Project to Evaluate the Effectiveness and Acceptability of the Joint Asia Diabetes Evaluation (JADE) and DIAbetes MONitoring Database (DIAMOND) Programs in Asian Type 2 Diabetic Patients
Quality diabetes care requires a team approach and informed decisions of patients and care
providers. Several lines of evidence suggests that a protocol-driven care model delivered by
trained staff with focus on periodic assessments, reinforcement of patient compliance and
attainment of multiple treatment targets reduces risk of cardio-renal complications and
early death in type 2 diabetes.
The investigators hypothesize that the use of state of the art information technology to
record, manage and analyze the large amount of clinical information generated during various
consultation visits will improve the effectiveness and efficiency in implementing these care
protocols through decision support and regular feedback to both patients and care team.
Diabetes is now a pandemic disease affecting 5-10% of global population. More than 60% of
affected people will come from Asia with the number expected to increase from 85 million in
2005 to 132 million in 2010 in Asia alone. On average, diabetes reduces life expectancy by
10-12 years. While stroke, heart disease and kidney failure account for more than 50% of
global deaths, 30-50% of patients with these conditions have diabetes as a major
contributing factor. In contrast to the West, the main increase in diabetes prevalence in
Asia will occur in the young to middle aged population. On average, 17 million people die
from stroke and heart disease on a yearly basis. Of these, 11 million occur in Asia,
affecting many young parents and economically active people.
Despite their devastating nature, many diabetic complications can be prevented and managed
effectively to preserve health, reduce disabilities and improve quality of life. However,
there are multiple barriers in the implementation of quality diabetes care. These include
insufficient knowledge base of health care professionals, fragmented nature of health care
systems, lack of reimbursement for outpatient procedures including therapeutic patient
education, poor compliance to treatment in part due to the silent nature of diabetes and
associated complications as well as the complex nature of care protocols. The latter include
periodic evaluation of clinical and laboratory parameters and the need for people with
diabetes to adhere to long term medications and self care.
While optimal management of risk factors and treatment to targets can substantially reduce
the risk of diabetes associated complications, the challenge lies in the effective
translation of this evidence to clinical practice. Since mid 1990s, inspired by the benefits
of structured care, made possible during the conduct of clinical trials, the CUHK Diabetes
Care & Research Group has developed prototypes of structured care protocols including an
annual comprehensive assessment using a doctor-nurse-physician assistant team. Consistent
with international data, these prototypes substantially improve rates of treatment
compliance and attainment of multiple treatment targets resulting in reduced death and
cardio-renal complication rates.
The Joint Asia Diabetes Evaluation (JADE) Program is a web-based disease management program
conceptualized, developed and tested by the Asia Diabetes Foundation (ADF) since 2007,
supported by a MSD educational grant. The objectives of the JADE Program include:
1. to promote collective learning and sharing of best practices in diabetes based on
regionally relevant evidence
2. to increase regional awareness about the magnitude of diabetes and its preventable
nature through education, ongoing data collection and implementation of evidence-based
guidelines
3. to establish a regional diabetes registry
4. to collect the evidence base to inform relevant stakeholders including public, people
with diabetes, health care professionals, policy makers and payors to change policies
and practices in order to make quality diabetes care accessible, sustainable and
affordable.
Using state of the art information technology, the JADE and DIAMOND electronic portal
provides a virtual platform to enable care professionals to record, manage and analyse the
large amount of information collected during various consultation visits. The Programs also
incorporate risk equations developed and validated by the CUHK Diabetes Care & Research
Group to help doctors assess their patients' future event rates. This information, displayed
in charts and trend lines, can be communicated to patients and doctors to motivate
behavioral changes and encourage dialogues to set treatment goals.
Apart from providing templates for documentation of risk factors and complications using
standardized protocols, the JADE Program also incorporates different evidence-based care
protocols with recommendations on follow up schedules and care processes in accordance to
the patient's risk profile. Decision support in terms of prompts, charts, trend lines and
practice tips are used to help doctors and patients to make informed decisions and to
optimize care. The JADE Program also possesses matrixes which enable care providers to track
clinical progress and risk factor control for benchmarking and quality improvement purposes.
On the other hand, the DIAMOND Program provides the first step to entry of a quality
assurance program by establishing a diabetes registry at a clinic level. The ongoing
collection of these data provides an invaluable platform for collaborative epidemiological
and interventional studies pertinent to Asian populations.
In this multicentre study, we shall use a trio team consisting of a trained doctor, nurse
and physician assistant (PA) to deliver protocol-driven diabetes care using a web-based
disease management program, the Joint Asia Diabetes Evaluation (JADE) Program. To fully
realize the functionality of the JADE Program requires changes in the practice environment
and deployment of additional manpower (e.g. a nurse and a PA) to enter data and provide
reminders to patients and doctors to improve adherence to protocols. In settings where these
changes may not be immediately possible, periodic comprehensive assessment using the
structured template in the JADE Program allows recognition of risk factors and complications
for early intervention. The latter will allow data collected in a systematic manner which
forms the basis of a DIAbetes MONitoring Database (DIAMOND) as a first step towards quality
assurance.
After explanation by trained doctors and nurses and with written informed consent, patients
will be randomized to either the JADE or DIAMOND Program. The former encompasses all
components of the structured care delivered by a trio-team of doctor, nurse and PA while the
DIAMOND Program only consists of comprehensive assessments at baseline and 12-month with
patients managed in the usual manner thereafter. At the end of 12 months, all patients will
undergo repeat comprehensive assessments for comparison of rates of attainment of treatment
targets, behavioral changes, quality of life and default rates.
Aims of the study:
1. To evaluate the reach, adoption and acceptability of the JD Program by patients and
health care team;
2. To compare the effectiveness of the JADE (structured care) versus DIAMOND (usual care)
Programs in attainment of treatment targets, improvement of quality of life and changes
in behaviors;
3. To document the pattern of complications, risk factors, use of medications and quality
of life in type 2 diabetic patients
Study sites:
1. Beijing People's Hospital, Beijing
2. Peking Union Hospital, Beijing
3. 1st Hospital, Peking University Hospital, Beijing
4. China-Japan Friendship Hospital, Beijing
5. Shanghai Sixth People's Hospital, Shanghai
6. Third Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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