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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Not yet recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT06304428
Other study ID # Pro00114580
Secondary ID
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date October 1, 2024
Est. completion date July 1, 2028

Study information

Verified date March 2024
Source Duke University
Contact Emily J Hecker, MSN, RN
Phone 1-919-660-6612
Email emily.hecker@duke.edu
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to compare three care models for optimizing medications and preventing falls with broken bones in patients receiving rehabilitation after a hospitalization for a broken bone. The primary outcome is injurious falls, with secondary outcomes measuring how the process of care is changed and capturing patient-reported outcomes valued by stakeholders. The main questions this study aims to answer are: - Which of the three models is more effective in preventing falls with fractures? - What are the differences in patient-centered outcomes amongst the three models? These include pain, depression, anxiety, sleep, medication side effect burden, and fear of falling. - What are the differences in osteoporosis treatment and medication burden? The three care models are: a Deprescribing Care Model designed to reduce or stop fall-related medications, a Bone Heath Service Model designed to provide osteoporosis evaluation and management, and an Injury Prevention Service Model offering both services. 42 SNFs will participate in this study. The three models will be incorporated into the routine care of patients at these facilities who are receiving rehabilitation after a hospitalization for a fracture. All care models will be delivered remotely to patients in the SNF and after they transition home by a post-fracture nurse consultant supported by an interprofessional team. This study has three aims. See Detailed Description for more details. This ClinicalTrials.gov record represents the Comparative Effectiveness Aim of the protocol.


Description:

After hospitalization for fracture, approximately 60% of older adults receive post-acute care in Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs), but fewer than 20% of these individuals receive medication optimization, which is evidence-based care known to prevent additional injurious falls, fractures, and mortality. Therefore, there is an opportunity to substantially improve care and patient outcomes in this setting. The purpose of this study is to determine the comparative efficacy of a Deprescribing Care Model designed to deprescribe fall related medications (FRIDs), a Bone Heath Service Model designed to provide osteoporosis evaluation and management, or an Injury Prevention Service Model offering both services. All care models will be delivered remotely to patients in the SNF and after they transition home by a post-fracture nurse consultant supported by an interprofessional team. The primary outcome is injurious falls, with secondary outcomes measuring how the process of care is changed and capturing patient-reported outcomes valued by stakeholders. Our Specific aims are to: 1. Conduct a randomized cluster crossover trial in fracture patients comparing the effectiveness of the Deprescribing Care Model, Bone Health Service Model, or Injury Prevention Service Model in 42 SNFs, with each SNF receiving 6 months of each intervention in random sequence. We will test for clinically important differences in patient-centered outcomes (living with medicines survey, PHQ-8 depression scale, anxiety, sleep, and pain scales) at 90 days and implementation measures osteoporosis prescriptions, drug burden) at the time of discharge. 2. Compare the effectiveness of the Deprescribing Care Model, Bone Health Service Model, or Injury Prevention Service Model on subsequent injurious fall and fractures for patients treated within the 42 randomized SNFs with those in 100 matched concurrent control SNFs. We will use data from the National Institute on Aging-funded Long-Term Care Data Cooperative which includes Minimum Data Set (MDS), Electronic Health Record (EHR), and Medicare (CMS) claims. To address decisional dilemmas, we will examine differences in efficacy by baseline estimated life expectancy and cognitive status. 3. Identify SNF characteristics associated with measures of effective model implementation. We hypothesize that organizational factors captured by SNF staff responses to surveys capturing organizational readiness for change will explain additional variance in implementation measures beyond factors known to be associated with care quality (staff turnover rates, for profit-status, region, case mix, and proportion of patients from racial and ethnic minority groups). Study Design: In the Comparative Effectiveness Aim (Aim 1), we will conduct a pragmatic, cluster randomized crossover trial in 42 SNFs comparing the effectiveness of a Bone Health Service Model, a Deprescribing Care Model, or an Injury Prevention Service Model, all delivered remotely by a post-fracture nurse consultant supported by an interprofessional team. Every SNF will receive 6 months of each care model in random sequence. All patients with osteoporotic (OP) fracture admitted to the SNF within the intervention time period will receive the full designated care model, even if their stay in the SNF extends into the next intervention period. Medication utilization (measured using EHR data) will be assessed at discharge and 90 days after SNF admission date, and Patient Reported Outcomes (PROs) (measured via survey) will be assessed at 90 days after SNF admission date, regardless of whether they have discharged home or remain in the SNF. We will therefore be able to compare the effectiveness of the models on important PROs, osteoporosis treatment rates, and FRID medication burden. Patients will be followed for injurious falls and fractures using administrative data and self-report during post-fracture nurse consultant calls until the end of the study period (up to 3 years, mean 2 years) censoring at death. In the Overall Effectiveness Aim, we will compare rates of injurious falls and fractures for patients treated with the Deprescribing Care Model, Bone Health Service Model, or Injury Prevention Service Model to patients treated in 100 matched concurrent control SNFs, identified through the Long Term Care Data Cooperative. No new data will be collected for this aim. In the Implementation Evaluation Aim, we will identify facility characteristics associated with high levels of intervention implementation. This aim will require the collection of surveys from facility leadership.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Not yet recruiting
Enrollment 3780
Est. completion date July 1, 2028
Est. primary completion date July 1, 2028
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 65 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Aged 65 years or greater. - Admitted to an enrolled SNF after hospitalized fracture. Exclusion Criteria: - Non-osteoporotic fracture (e.g. facial, digital, skull, at site of tumor or infection, or due to hardware placement). - Receiving hospice or palliative care at the time of screening

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Deprescribing Care Model
The Deprescribing Care Model is designed to deprescribe fall related medications (FRIDs)
Bone Health Service Model
The Bone Health Service Model is designed to provide osteoporosis evaluation and management
Injury Prevention Service Model
The Injury Prevention Service Model provides both the Deprescribing Care Model and the Bone Health Service Model.

Locations

Country Name City State
n/a

Sponsors (6)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Duke University Brown University, Hebrew SeniorLife, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, The American Health Care Association, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Injurious falls Composite outcome of unique claims for emergency department, urgent care, or hospital visit for injurious fall or any fracture during follow-up (up to 3 years) (ICD 10 codes); to ensure complete ascertainment for participants with Medicare Advantage, researchers will also collect via self-report/proxy report at telephone calls 1, 3, 6, 12, 18 months, and 24 months following discharge from the SNF. Up to 3 years
Secondary Number of patients who initiate treatment for osteoporosis Osteoporosis treatment (process outcome) 1 day of discharge from SNF and one year
Secondary Medication Possession Ratio during follow-up, as measured by EHR and Medicare claims Osteoporosis treatment adherence (process outcome) Up to 3 years
Secondary Number of patients who had deprescribing ordered Fall-risk increasing drug (FRID) use (process outcome) 1 day of discharge from SNF and 90 days after SNF admission date
Secondary Modified Drug Burden Index during follow-up, as measured by EHR and Medicare claims Fall-risk increasing drug (FRID) use (process outcome) Up to 3 years
Secondary Patient medication side effect burden, measured via Living with Medicines Questionnaire (LMQ3). The LMQ3 is a validated self-report questionnaire. Medication side effect burden is measured via composite scores ranging from: No burden at all (41-73); Minimal burden (74-106); Moderate burden (107-139); High burden (140-172); and Extremely high burden (173-205), as well as a visual analog scale with scores ranging from: no burden at all (0.0- 2.0); minimal burden (2.1 -4.0); moderate (4.1-5.9); high burden (6.0-7.9); extremely high burden (8.0-10.0). 90 days after SNF admission date
Secondary Patient falls self-efficacy (i.e. fear of falling), measured via Falls Efficacy Scale The Falls Efficacy Scale is a validated self-report questionnaire. Scores range from 10-100. A total score of greater than 70 indicates that the person has a fear of falling. 90 days after SNF admission date
Secondary Patient pain, measured via Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Pain Interference Short Form The Pain Interference Short Form is a validated self-report questionnaire. Each item on the measure is rated on a 5-point scale (1=not at all; 2=a little bit; 3=somewhat; 4=quite a bit; and 5=very much) with a range in score from 6 to 30 with higher scores indicating a greater degree of pain interference. 90 days after SNF admission date
Secondary Patient depression, measured via Patient Health Questionnaire survey (PHQ-8) The PHQ-8 is a validated questionnaire for assessing the severity of depression symptoms.The score for each item is calculated by assigning scores of 0, 1, 2, and 3, to the response categories of: not at all, several days, more than half the days, and nearly every day, respectively. Total score for the 8 items ranges from 0 to 24. Scores of 5, 10, 15, and 20 represent cutpoints for mild, moderate, moderately severe and severe depression, respectively. 90 days after SNF admission date
Secondary Patient anxiety, measured via PROMIS anxiety short form survey The PROMIS anxiety short form survey is a validated self-report questionnaire. Each item on the measure is rated on a 5-point scale (1=never; 2=rarely; 3=sometimes; 4=often; and 5=always) with a range in score from 7 to 35 with higher scores indicating greater severity of anxiety. 90 days after SNF admission date
Secondary Patient sleep, measured via PROMIS sleep disturbance short form The PROMIS sleep disturbance short form is a validated self-report questionnaire. Each item on the measure is rated on a 5-point scale (1=never; 2=rarely; 3=sometimes; 4=often; and 5=always) with a range in score from 8 to 40 with higher scores indicating greater severity of sleep disturbance. 90 days after SNF admission date
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