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Clinical Trial Summary

In France, end-stage renal disease (ESRD) affects almost 170 people per million inhabitants every year, and 92,500 people are treated by dialysis or kidney transplantation (0.14% of the French population). The treatment of chronic renal failure is extremely costly: 4 billion euros in 2021, i.e. 2% of health insurance expenditure, and an annual cost of 42,000 euros per patient. The health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of dialysis patients is low, with reports of patients at 40%-60% of full health. In France, there has been a significant decrease in physical (-15.4 points) and mental (-6.9 points) component scores compared with the general population. Dialysis patients often present severe or overwhelming symptoms, which contribute to this poor HRQoL. However, in nephrology, studies have focused on survival and laboratory biomarkers, and very few interventions have been aimed at improving what was a priority for patients, i.e. treating their symptoms and improving their HRQoL. Opportunities to intervene and improve symptom management and overall HRQoL may therefore have been missed. Ignoring patients' symptoms is an important omission. Of 28 randomized trials in primary care and oncology that measured the impact of communicating patient-reported outcomes to clinicians, 65% showed improved care processes and 47% improved health outcomes. The results of two recent randomized trials in oncology suggest that symptom monitoring can improve HRQoL and overall survival. There is no evidence for dialysis patients, although therapeutic solutions are available in most cases. Nephrology teams do not sufficiently recognize the prevalence, severity and negative effects of symptoms in their patients, and patients under-report their symptoms. With systematic symptom screening and automatic transmission of symptoms in the form of alerts, dialysis staff will be able to react and implement routine management to alleviate patients' symptoms. The F-SWIFT study evaluates the hypothesis that regular symptom monitoring and feedback to hemodialysis patients and their dialysis staff improves patient HRQoL at 18 months. In addition, the trial aims to determine whether electronic capture of patient-reported outcomes within a national dialysis patient registry is feasible and cost-effective, evaluated using consumption data from the Système National des données de Santé (SNDS) medico-administrative database. F-SWIFT is the French part of an international project (SWIFT) initiated in Australia in 2021: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry #ACTRN12620001061921. This French part is funded by Inserm's AAP MESSIDORE 2022. F-SWIFT is also the continuation of the pilot study n° 2021-A00776-35 accepted by the CPP EST II on 19/10/2021 and financed by the Agence de la Biomédecine (AOR 2021) in the RIPH3 category.


Clinical Trial Description

F-SWIFT is a large-scale, multi-center, randomized controlled trial (qualitative and quantitative) nested in a national registry. Indeed, this research project is nested in the REIN (Réseau Epidémiologique et Information en Nephrologie) registry, to which all dialysis units in France have been contributing for over 10 years. All information on the dialysis units and the patients included is taken directly from the register. The field presence of REIN's clinical research officers ensures the quality of the data routinely collected for the registry, and reused in this project. The F-SWIFT project includes a process analysis to support the transferability of F-SWIFT in the event of proven effectiveness, with a view to large-scale deployment. Data analysis will be carried out by a biostatistician and Human and Social Sciences engineers from CIC 1433 Epidémiologie Clinique at CHRU Nancy. In accordance with the third paragraph of article 56 of the French Data Protection Act, the presentation of the results of data processing may under no circumstances allow direct or indirect identification of the persons involved in the research. Experimental group - Quarterly measurement for 18 months of patients' symptoms using the IPOS-Renal questionnaire, which will be systematically reported to professionals. - Measurement every 6 months for 18 months of patients' health-related HRQoL using the EQ-5D-5L (European Quality of Life 5 Dimensions 5 Level Version), KDQoL-36 (Kidney Disease and Quality of Lifeā„¢ Short Form) and SONG-Fatigue (Stadardised Outcomes in NephroloGy Fatigue) questionnaires. Control group - No systematic symptom monitoring will be organized, and patients will receive usual care. - Measurement every 6 months for 18 months of health-related HRQoL using the EQ-5D-5L, KDQoL-36 and SONG-Fatigue questionnaires. Process evaluation phase Quantitative component For all dialysis units included in the experimental arm: The REIN registry will provide data on: legal status, volume of patients managed, treatment options offered. The REIN registry will also provide data on patients in these units: age, sex, comorbidity, length of time on dialysis and dialysis treatment modality. For patients at inclusion, an ad hoc questionnaire will be added on electronic equipment at home, which includes the availability and use of a laptop, desktop, tablet, cell phone and broadband internet subscription. Per unit, every 3 months, loyalty criteria (% of patients having completed the IPOS-Renal questionnaire) and dose criteria (cumulative number of completed IPOS-Renal questionnaires) will be collected. Based on the reimbursement list provided by the health insurance (data extracted from the REIN register linked to the SNDS), changes in prescribing practices will be studied (prescription of drugs and supportive care, in particular dietary, psychological and sports care). The before-and-after trends will be analyzed one year after the end of the study in the unit (remote evaluation), since the data are only consolidated at that time. Qualitative component: Three months after the start of the study, from among the units in the experimental group meeting the condition without external assistance from the Clinical Research Nurse (CRN) to collect data, five units will be selected following an extreme case sampling (2 with the highest level, 1 with a standard level and 2 with the lowest level of intervention application) to conduct semi-structured interviews. At this stage, the research team will focus on organizational and implementation factors to provide information for the scientific committee, which will be responsible for decisions to adapt the F-SWIFT intervention and improve its effectiveness. After three months of fine-tuning the intervention, the research team will carry out a second wave of qualitative process evaluation to (re)test the intervention in five other units. Semi-structured individual interviews will therefore be conducted with patients and healthcare professionals (nurses and doctors) on the basis of a guide developed to gather perceptual data on how contextual characteristics affect the effective implementation and outcomes of the F-SWIFT intervention. Participants in the individual semi-structured interview will receive an e-mail from an engineer in the humanities and social sciences, informing them of the date and time of the appointment, as well as the connection link if the interview takes place remotely. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06257134
Study type Interventional
Source Central Hospital, Nancy, France
Contact Amandine OSTERMANN
Phone 03 83 85 28 52
Email a.ostermann@chru-nancy.fr
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date March 15, 2024
Completion date September 15, 2026

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