Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05641077 |
Other study ID # |
22-1269 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 20, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
June 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
March 2024 |
Source |
The Cleveland Clinic |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The proposed VIDEO randomized trial will help inform clinical practice regarding the utility
and perceived value of videoconferencing for postoperative care of urogynecologic patients by
comparing patient satisfaction with virtual video visits and traditional in-office visits
after pelvic organ prolapse and/or anti-incontinence surgery. Patient satisfaction will be
measured by the Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire-18 at the 6-week postoperative visit. The
investigators hypothesize that patient satisfaction with the virtual postoperative visit will
be non-inferior to an in-office visit. The study will secondarily investigate other important
components of healthcare quality, including safety and clinical outcomes, by comparing
postoperative healthcare resource utilization and adverse events within 12 weeks after
urogynecologic surgery. Healthcare resource utilization as measured by patient-initiated
phone calls, unscheduled in-person/virtual office visits, emergency room or urgent care
visits, and inpatient readmissions within 6 weeks following surgery and within 12 weeks
following surgery. The study also aims to evaluate patient and provider preferences/attitudes
toward in-office versus virtual-video postoperative visits.
Description:
The study is a randomized controlled noninferiority trial evaluating patient satisfaction
with in-office versus virtual-video postoperative visits at six weeks following
urogynecologic surgery. We aim to assess whether the intervention of virtual postoperative
visit via videoconference technology is noninferior to the standard/traditional in-office
postoperative visit for our primary outcome of patient satisfaction. The recruitment period
will be 15 months (January 1, 2023 to March 31, 2024). The follow-up period for each
participant will be 12 weeks after surgery.
The investigators will recruit patients of the Center for Urogynecology and Pelvic
Reconstructive Surgery in the Department of Obstetrics/Gynecology and Women's Health
Institute at the Cleveland Clinic scheduled to undergo major or minor surgery for pelvic
organ prolapse and/or urinary incontinence. Participants will be prospectively identified by
the primary surgeon during the patient's initial consultation when the decision is made to
proceed with surgery for pelvic organ prolapse and/or urinary incontinence. Enrolled
participants will be randomized to either the office visit arm or the virtual visit arm.
Stratified block randomization will be used to ensure that the number of participants is
equally distributed among the study groups and stratified by surgery level (major, minor).
Study instruments will be administered at the preoperative visit and the 6-week postoperative
visit. The questionnaires for this study include the Patient Preparedness Questionnaire
(PPQ), the Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire-18 (PSQ-18), and modified patient and provider
preference questionnaires entitled, Patient Postoperative Visit Questionnaire and Provider
Postoperative Visit Preference Questionnaire.
In addition to questionnaire responses, the investigators will collect the following
information from the electronic medical record: Demographic data (e.g. age, race, parity,
body mass index), perioperative data (e.g. surgery level major/minor, surgery type,
concomitant procedures, estimated blood loss, operative time), six-week postoperative data
(e.g. route of postoperative visit in-office/virtual, patient-initiated phone calls to
surgeon's office, unanticipated outpatient visits, emergency department visits, hospital
readmissions prior to the postoperative visit, adverse events prior to postoperative visit),
and 6-12 week postoperative data (e.g. patient-initiated phone calls to surgeon's office,
unanticipated outpatient visits, emergency department visits, hospital readmissions, and
adverse events after the scheduled postoperative visit for up to 12 weeks after surgery).
A priori sample size calculation determined that 100 participants (50 per group) would allow
for 80% power to assess a noninferiority margin of 5 points on the total PSQ-18, with a SD of
10 and significance level of 0.05. A minimum important difference has not been reported for
the PSQ-18; however, previous studies using this tool demonstrated SD for total PSQ-18 score
ranging between 2.6 and 11.8 and used a 5-point interval for the noninferiority margin. To
account for an anticipated attrition rate of approximately 5%, we aimed to enroll a total of
106 participants (53 per group).
Patient satisfaction (PSQ-18) total scores, as well scores in each of the 7 PSQ-18 domains,
will be treated as continuous data and checked for normality. Healthcare utilization will be
analyzed individually (number of phone calls, number of outpatient visits, number of
emergency department or urgent care visits, number of hospital readmissions), as well as a
composite of all encounter types. Adverse events will be analyzed independently but also as a
composite utilizing the Clavien-Dindo Grading System for surgical complications. Attitudes
toward office/virtual visits will be analyzed by comparing proportions of patients and
providers who prefer a virtual visit, prefer an office visit, or have no preference.
All analyses will be conducted using an intention-to-treat principle. Baseline demographic
and clinical characteristics will be summarized using descriptive statistics.
Normally-distributed continuous measures will be summarized using mean and standard deviation
(SD), whereas those showing departure from normality will be summarized using median and
interquartile range (IQR). Categorical measures will be summarized using number of
participants and percentage. The primary end-point analysis will be designed to test whether
patient satisfaction with a virtual postoperative visit is noninferior to an in-person
postoperative visit, as determined by the total PSQ-18 at the scheduled postoperative visit.
Noninferiority would be shown if the lower limit of the two-sided 95% confidence interval for
the between-group mean difference in the primary endpoint (i.e., the difference between the
mean PSQ-18 total score in the virtual group minus the mean PSQ-18 total score in the
in-office group) is more than -5 points. Similar analyses will be performed for each
secondary outcome. The noninferiority margin is defined as 5 points for the PSQ-18 total
score and 0.5 points for the PSQ-18 domain scores, 10% absolute for composite healthcare
resource utilization, and 25% absolute for composite adverse events. Planned exploratory
subgroup analyses of patient satisfaction, healthcare resource utilization and adverse events
based on surgery level will be additionally performed. All statistical analyses will be
performed using JMP Pro version 17.0 software (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). Data will be managed
in REDCap. Statistical support will be provided by the Cleveland Clinic Quantitative Health
Sciences.