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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01586897
Other study ID # R18HS018648
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received April 25, 2012
Last updated December 8, 2015
Start date May 2012
Est. completion date May 2013

Study information

Verified date December 2015
Source Massachusetts General Hospital
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority United States: Federal Government
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This project tests a model of chronic disease medication management in which the decision to initiate or adjust medical therapy is directly linked to a sequence of subsequent clinical actions (e.g. monitoring for adverse drug events, assessing response to therapy, changing medication dose) performed independently of the office visit. The investigators hypothesize that establishing a visit-independent, health information technology (IT) supported cycle of laboratory monitoring and iterative medication dose adjustment will result in more effective chronic disease care.


Description:

To implement a new model of chronic disease management, we will build on our existing electronic health record and integrated data systems to develop an advanced health IT application called the "Medication Metronome" to enable providers to schedule future laboratory tests related to a specific set of medications (for glycemic, cholesterol, and blood pressure management). As these lab test dates become due, the Medication Metronome system will remind patients via letter and inform providers when the tests remain "missing." The goal of this intervention is to implement an efficient, visit-independent system to ensure that patients are rapidly and safely brought to evidence-based treatment goals and to prevent delays in planned laboratory monitoring. This study has the following aims:

Aim 1: To develop the Medication Metronome system. This work involves health IT development and evaluation of design prototypes to create a system that supports timely medication intensification, improves safety, and meets both patient and provider needs.

Aim 2: To conduct a randomized controlled trial of the Medication Metronome system. We will use three target chronic conditions to test different elements of the system. We hypothesize that use of the Medication Metronome system will lead to:

H2a. More effective HbA1c control among patients with type 2 diabetes prescribed hypoglycemic medicines; H2b. Safer medication management among patients with hypertension prescribed thiazide diuretics, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, or angiotensin II receptor blockers; H2c. Both more effective LDL-cholesterol control and safer monitoring for hepatitis among patients with hyperlipidemia prescribed HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors.

Aim 3: To evaluate the impact of the Medication Metronome visit-independent care model on the content of office-based visits. Time spent addressing different clinical care domains will be assessed using audiotape-based content analysis in a subset of selected office visits.

Summary: We will implement, and rigorously evaluate a health IT-supported model of visit-independent medication management designed to enable safer and more effective chronic disease care. We will also carefully investigate the impact of this system on primary care visits. The broader goal of this work is to support health delivery redesign that fosters patient-centered primary care by combining visit-independent medication management with more productive visit-based patient-provider interactions.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 52
Est. completion date May 2013
Est. primary completion date May 2013
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- All primary care physicians from participating practices will be eligible to participate in the study.

- Patients Eligible for Analysis: The primary unit of analysis will be prescribed medicine, grouped with patient and within prescribing PCP. Three potentially overlapping medication-based cohorts will be defined: 1) Patients prescribed any hypoglycemic agents, 2) Patients prescribed thiazide diuretics, ACE-Is, or ARBs, and 3) Patients prescribed statins. Based on this design, individual patients may contribute to more than one medication analytic cohort.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Patients Excluded from Analysis: Patients who are subsequently identified as having died during the course of the study intervention using the Social Security Death Index, to have left the MGH system, or to have changed PCPs.

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Intervention

Device:
Medication Metronome
Providers allocated to intervention will see an additional feature when logging on to their electronic health record medication prescription interface that enables them to schedule future laboratory testing for the pre-defined subset of study-specific medications. New prescription or dose adjustment by the PCP of one of these pre-specified medications used to treat type 2 diabetes, hypertension, or hyperlipidemia will initiate the follow-up result monitoring, patient outreach, and PCP reminders that constitute the Medication Metronome system.
Other:
Usual Care


Locations

Country Name City State
United States Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Massachusetts

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Massachusetts General Hospital Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Primary Effectiveness Outcome - LDL Percentage of follow-up time (from initial prescription to final laboratory result available during the 18-month study period) that a patient is at or below risk factor goal for LDL(LDL-cholesterol = 130 mg/dL for patients without cardiovascular risk and = 100 mg/dl for patients with cardiovascular risk). 1 year No
Primary Primary Effectiveness Outcome - A1c Percentage of follow-up time (from initial prescription to final laboratory result available during the 18-month study period) that a patient is at or below risk factor goal for HbA1c(HbA1c = 7.0%). 1 year No
Primary Medication Safety Monitoring - Statins Percentage of laboratory tests (liver function tests after a new statin prescription or a change in statin dose) that have been measured within 4 weeks following prescription. Treatment guidelines for prescription of statins recommend follow-up liver function testing. We chose 4-weeks following the prescription to represent successful safety monitoring. Within 4 weeks following prescription Yes
Primary Medication Safety Monitoring - Metformin Percentage of renal function laboratory tests that have been measured within 4-weeks following prescription. Treatment guidelines for prescription of metformin recommend renal function testing. We chose 4- weeks following the prescription to represent successful safety monitoring. Within 4 weeks following prescription Yes
Primary Medication Safety Monitoring - ACE/ARB, Thiazide Percentage of laboratory tests (potassium for thiazides, renal/potassium for ACE/ARBs that have been measured within 4-weeks following prescription. Treatment guidelines for prescription of ACE/ARBs recommend renal/potassium testing and potassium testing for prescription of thiazides. We chose 4-weeks following the prescription to represent successful safety monitoring. Within 4 weeks following prescription Yes
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