Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Enrolling by invitation
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05235620 |
Other study ID # |
2008163459 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Enrolling by invitation |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
July 1, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
March 28, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
April 2024 |
Source |
Purdue University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the initial "spread and scale" of PatientToc™, a
patient-reported outcomes (PROs) collection software, to community pharmacies for the
collection and use of PROs data pertaining to medication adherence. The investigators are
doing this by engaging PatientToc™ and pharmacy partners in two plan-do-study-act (PDSA)
cycles to implement and refine PatientToc™ and an implementation toolkit (i.e.,
supports/resource tools) within a small number of community pharmacies. Investigators will
then scale implementation to more community pharmacies in a rigorous theory-driven evaluation
of PatientToc™ implementation using interviews, self-reported data from the pharmacy,
observations, and administrative data. Collectively, the findings will inform long-term
collection and use of PROs data pertaining to medication use.
Description:
Medication non-adherence is a problem of critical importance, affecting approximately 50% of
all persons taking at least one regularly scheduled prescription medication and costing the
United States more than $100 billion annually. Medication non-adherence is associated with
clinical outcomes including hospitalizations and mortality. It is a complex, multi-faceted
problem with many causes such as forgetfulness, access/affordability concerns, and avoiding
medication due to bothersome side effects. Johnson's Medication Adherence Model (MAM)
summarizes these causes by theorizing that patients must both "Remember" and "Intend" to take
medication. The importance of reducing medication non-adherence is reflected in the Healthy
People 2020 goals and objectives and recognized in the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS) star ratings program for Medicare Part D prescription drug plans (PDPs). Plans
are rated annually as achieving 1 (lowest quality) to 5 (highest quality) stars. Plans
receiving 5 stars are rewarded through quality bonus payments and the ability for patients to
switch to the plan outside of the annual open enrollment period. Several measures used in
determining star ratings are based on beneficiary medication adherence.
Community pharmacists are uniquely positioned to intervene on medication non-adherence.
Community pharmacies are widely accessible and visited frequently by patients with chronic
conditions, including the elderly and patients without a regular source of primary care.
Community pharmacists can provide support for challenges commonly faced by patients such as
limited health literacy, being un/underinsured, and limited English proficiency. Further,
community pharmacies nationwide have increased efforts to improve measures influencing PDP
star measures to ensure the pharmacy is positioned for financial reward through inclusion in
the PDPs preferred pharmacy network and possible bonus payments. Traditional data sources for
identifying and resolving medication non-adherence in community pharmacies include
prescription fill histories. However, medication possession does not necessarily mean
patients are taking medications as prescribed. Patient-reported outcomes (PROs), measuring
adherence challenges pertaining to both remembering and intention to take medication, offer a
rich data source for pharmacists and prescribers to use to resolve medication non-adherence.
Although the value of collecting and utilizing PROs for clinical and research purposes has
been more widely recognized in recent years, to the investigators' knowledge, there are no
examples of widespread electronic collection and use of PROs data 1) in community pharmacy
settings, or 2) pertaining specifically to medication adherence in ambulatory settings.
Moreover, numerous implementation challenges have been reported and the systematic collection
of timely and actionable PROs data can be challenging, particularly for patient populations
with limited literacy and/or health literacy. For example, paper-based data collection can be
burdensome for data management/analysis and data quality concerns may be evident. Electronic
data collection offers advantages but technology must ensure privacy and security standards
are in place to support the reliability and validity of the data. In addition, data must be
accessible to providers in a timely fashion for clinical decision making. Finally, while
technology exists to facilitate the transfer of PROs data into electronic health records
(EHRs) and providers want these data to populate with laboratory results, few electronic
systems do so.
In December 2016, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) released Funding
Opportunity Announcement PA-17-077 which provides funding for research projects to "scale and
spread" successful health information technology models that use PROs in ambulatory settings.
Consequently, the investigators received funding in April 2019 to conduct research to inform
long-term collection and use of PROs data pertaining to medication adherence in community
pharmacies by spreading and scaling a successful model (PatientToc™, described below) for
health information technology-enabled PROs collection.
Description of PatientToc: Current Use in Physician Offices PatientToc™ is a PROs collection
software developed by investigators from the L.A. Net Community Health Resources Network (LA
Net), a primary care practice-based research network (PBRN) in California. PatientToc™ was
developed to facilitate collection of PROs data from low-literacy and non-English speaking
patients in Los Angeles. L.A. Net provided a design for the product based on experience
collecting PROs from more than 10,000 patients in L.A. Net practices speaking 42 different
languages. The system was developed over a period of 4 years with continuous input from
clinicians, community health workers, patients and researchers. PatientToc™ is used in
waiting rooms, pre-visit areas, exam rooms, and educator rooms. Patients interact with a
10-inch android tablet that is either hand held or installed in a case or holder attached to
a table. Consistent with research on low-literacy, the system presents one question at a
time. Patients use disposable ear buds to maintain confidentiality when patients use the read
aloud function. The system can deliver any PROs and responses are transmitted real time to
the PatientToc™ server where staff and clinicians can access the results both as a pdf
replica of a paper version of the completed survey, and as an aggregated SQL or Excel
database. PatientToc™ integrates with EHRs via Health Level Seven (HL7) standards or Fast
Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) interfaces, and through third party integration
with service provider systems. Currently, PatientToc™ is being used in over 36 practices
including 2 Federally Qualified Health Centers. Two California health plans have also used
the system to transmit mandatory initial health assessments. Approximately 10,000 patients
have completed PROs on PatientToc™ tablets, including the: PHQ-9, Medicare Health Risk
Assessments, SBIRT screening, and others.
Aim 1: Conduct a pre-implementation developmental formative evaluation to determine community
pharmacy workflow and current practices for identifying and resolving medication
non-adherence, potential barriers and facilitators to PatientToc™ implementation, and create
a draft implementation toolkit. This Aim was previously completed under a separate exempt
protocol
Aim 2: Conduct two plan-do-study-act (PDSA) cycles to refine an implementation toolkit for
spreading and scaling implementation of PatientToc™ in community pharmacies.
Aim 3: Conduct a comprehensive, theory-driven evaluation of the quality of care,
implementation, and patient health outcomes of spreading and scaling PatientToc™ to community
pharmacies.
Aim 4: To explore the feasibility of linking PROs data from PatientToc™ with healthcare
utilization data. This will inform future research.
Aim 5: To conduct exploratory and secondary analyses to examine variations in medication
therapy problems (MTPs), pharmacist interventions, and PatientToc™ outcomes by implementation
scope and patient characteristics. Secondary analyses using Aim 1 data might also be
completed, such as examining expected barriers from a staff perspective vs. actual concerns
identified in Aims 2 and 3 pertaining to feasibility and acceptability.
Aim 6: To evaluate a novel continuing education (CE) program provided to pharmacies as part
of the PatientToc™ implementation toolkit.
Aim 7: To assess participating pharmacists' perceptions of participating in this study.