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Clinical Trial Summary

Alcohol related liver disease (ALD) contributes to 50% cases of cirrhosis worldwide and is the leading indication for liver transplant in North America. The treatment for ALD is achieving total alcohol abstinence and preventing relapse as medical and surgical options are limited when drinking continues. Patient care has been hindered by the isolation of Addiction Medical Services from Internal Medicine, Family Medicine, and Hepatology. Patients with ALD would benefit from multidisciplinary approach as it combines medical care of liver disease and management of addiction and mental health. The investigators aim to develop a patient-centered integrated care pathway supported by expertise from Hepatology, Addiction Medicine and Psychiatry to improve access to addiction services for patients with ALD. By participating in the services, patients will experience decreased substance use, psychological symptoms, and improved health-related quality of life, with greater patient and provider satisfaction.


Clinical Trial Description

Introduction: Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) elevates the risk of a number of health conditions, with social, economic and clinical consequences. The effects of AUD are particular evident among individuals with ALD. The persistence of alcohol consumption is the main risk factor for progression of liver damage and complications. Despite this disease burden the resources devoted to either research or treatment of ALD have lagged compared with liver diseases from other etiologies. Progress has been hindered by the isolation of key specialites, which leads to late recognition of ALD. Patients with ALD would benefit from a multidisciplinary approach as it combines several domains including medical and psychiatric care; however, there is little research describing an integrated care alcohol use disorder (AUD) model for patients with ALD within Canada. Our multidisciplinary team, encompassing Hepatologists, Addiction Medicine and Psychiatry has been co-developing a patient-centered integrated care pathway to enhance collaborative practice among these specialities and meet the needs of our patients with ALD and AUD. The goal of this study is to carry out collaborative participatory research with health care providers and patients to co-develop and refine a responsive integrated care pathway (ICP) that addresses alcohol use disorders for patients with ALD at a large urban based hospital setting. Specifically, this study aims to: 1. To examine the feasibility of implementing several key strategies to initiate an integrated care pathway. 2. To explore the providers' and patients' perspectives regarding the acceptability of the integrated care pathway and seek their recommendations for improvement. 3. To explore the preliminary effects of the intervention based on changes over 6 months in health outcomes and use of health services. 4. To make recommendations that will inform spread and scale to other sites and for other conditions related to AUD. Study design: This demonstration project will use a multi-method design to co-develop an integrated care pathway (ICP) for AUD and ALD, and to acquire the most comprehensive understanding of processes and outcomes. This will be a single site pragmatic pilot study evaluating feasibility, acceptability and preliminary effects of the ICP. Participants: Investigators will use a convenience sample of consecutive ALD patients who are referred to the outpatient advanced liver clinic. The intervention protocol: The 6-month ICP intervention consists of several core intervention components, building upon the available resources and usual care practices at Health Sciences Centre and based on an AUD/ALD model of care implemented elsewhere. Data: Over the intervention period of the study, data on ICP implementation will be collected through monthly research team meetings with the interventionists, and through semi-structured interviews with patients and focus groups with health care providers. Multiple questionnaires and clinical data will be used to examine feasibility measures and preliminary clinical outcomes. Impact: The impact of this research is two-fold: 1) the combination of psychosocial interventions, pharmacological therapy and medical management offers the most effective strategy for addressing AUD among patients with ALD; 2) the collaboration and cooperation fostered through a participatory approach will tailor high quality care and enable our team to expand our model and develop community partnerships for spread and scale. ;


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NCT number NCT05375682
Study type Interventional
Source University of Manitoba
Contact
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date June 2022
Completion date June 2024