Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Asthma is a common chronic condition that causes substantial morbidity among children and much of it is attributable to medication non-adherence. The National Asthma Education and Prevention Program (NAEPP) and the American Academy of Asthma, Allergy, and Immunology have urged others to develop more effective adherence programs.Schools are a logical setting to deploy such interventions because they are where children congregate, spend much of their day, and are frequently monitored. Because many schools serve a high proportion of minority and low-income students, engaging them presents a unique opportunity to reach populations who experience the greatest burden of preventable morbidity. Supervising inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) use in the school setting can increase medication adherence and reduce episodes of poor asthma control. Under certain conditions, it can also be cost-effective. However, recruiting children from school settings tends to enroll children with mild asthma and infrequent health care use. Therefore, initiating supervised treatment in these children tends to burden school personnel with unnecessary work and diminishes the program's cost-effectiveness. To address this inefficiency, the investigators propose to recruit children who are discharged from the Hospital Emergency Departments (EDs) following successful treatment of an asthma attack. Such children have much higher risk of a future asthma attack than their peers. The Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) com- prises10 hospital-affiliated EDs that serve 1 million acutely ill and injured children annually. Their primary research mission is to reduce childhood morbidity and mortality by establishing creative partnerships between emergency medical service providers and their surrounding communities. The networks size and geographic diversity make it uniquely situated to develop, implement, and evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of ED-Initiated School-Based Asthma Medication Supervision (ED-SAMS). Approximately one-third of children treated for an asthma attack within PECARN experience a second ED-managed attack within 6 months. While the NAEPP guidelines recommend that long-term ICS treatment should be initiated at ED discharge, <20% of children actually receive a prescription for controller therapy. Observational data indicate that patients who use ICS following discharge are almost half as likely as non-users to experience a repeat ED visit. Many have also argued that ED-initiated treatment could be cost-effective. However, simply providing patients with a prescription does not ensure that they will actually use it once discharged. To ensure better medication adherence, the investigators propose to dispense ICS at discharge and supervise its use in the school setting.


Clinical Trial Description

Approximately 8% of children in the United States have asthma. Each year, these children experience 4 million asthma attacks that result in 725,000 ED visits and 100,000 hospitalizations. Unsurprisingly, the direct medical expenditures of children with asthma are 75-90% higher than those of children without asthma. In 2016, this amount totaled 40 billion dollars. Substantial indirect costs are incurred when parents miss work to care for their children who miss school. These additional costs raise the total economic burden of asthma to $80 billion annually. Frequent asthma-related school absences impair academic achievement and social functioning. This burden falls disproportionately on minority, low-income, and urban populations. For example, black children have 60% more ED visits and 75% more hospitalizations than white children even though they have similar asthma attack rates. Adherence to ICS is notoriously poor.20, 22, 23 While 86% of privately insured patients who receive an ICS prescription will refill it within 30 days, only 64% will subsequently refill it again within 180 days. Even worse, only 3% will refill enough medication to cover greater than or equal to 75% of prescribed days with average medication possession being approximately 20%. Black and Hispanic patients are 20% less likely to refill their initial prescription and are 40% less likely to refill enough medication to cover greater than or equal to 75% of prescribed days. Adherence is similarly poor among the publicly insured. Among Medicaid-insured children, ICS is only refilled enough to cover 20% of prescribed days; fewer than 15% will refill enough to cover greater than or equal to 50% of days. At any given time, 40% of children with asthma are not well-controlled and much of this is attributable to nonadherence. Simulation and modeling studies suggest that maximizing ICS adherence among those prescribed ICS could reduce health care utilization by 25-45%. Even greater reductions are hypothesized if ICS prescribing could be expanded to all patients at risk of serious asthma-related exacerbations. However, a recent Cochrane review concluded that current methods of improving adherence for chronic health problems are mostly complex and not very effective. New adherence strategies will be needed if society is to achieve the gains suggested possible by simulations. Medication non-adherence among patients with chronic disease is a multi-dimensional challenge. The cost and convenience of obtaining medication (health system factors) and the motivation needed to adhere with a daily health habit (patient-related factors) are common barriers to adherence that are addressed by this study. Medication acquisition costs deter patients from refilling and refilling prescription medications. Even small $1-3 co-payments can appreciably reduce adherence. However, imposing additional time costs by requiring more frequent refills has an even greater impact. Time costs can add $50-100 per prescription. Therefore, the $155 out-of-pocket spending estimate for children's asthma medication likely understates the true economic burden. Dispensing ICS in the ED is therefore expected to improve adherence by reducing the substantial time and travel costs associated with medication acquisition. ICS treatment also burdens patients by requiring them to adopt a daily health habit. For children, this burden primarily falls on parents. Parents weigh the perceived benefits of treatment against their perceptions of treatment risk and burden. Given that asthma symptoms fluctuate in response to treatment and season, many purposefully reduce medication administration when their child's symptoms wane (volitional non-adherence). In the absence of treatment, the underlying inflammation is allowed to worsen and exacerbation risk increases. This reactive pattern of medication use is substantiated by the fact that 37% of all prescriptions for ICS are refilled on the same day as prescriptions for oral corticosteroid, suggesting after the exacerbation, not before it.18 Even more disturbing, less than 50% of children who refilled a prescription for oral corticosteroid were ever noted to have refilled an ICS prescription, meaning most lacked any access to controller medication.18 Our proposal addresses the problem of primary non-adherence by dispensing medication in the ED and addresses non-adherence by arranging supervised use in the school setting. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03952286
Study type Interventional
Source University of Arizona
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 4
Start date August 1, 2019
Completion date January 1, 2021

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Terminated NCT04410523 - Study of Efficacy and Safety of CSJ117 in Patients With Severe Uncontrolled Asthma Phase 2
Completed NCT04624425 - Additional Effects of Segmental Breathing In Asthma N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03927820 - A Pharmacist-Led Intervention to Increase Inhaler Access and Reduce Hospital Readmissions (PILLAR) N/A
Completed NCT04617015 - Defining and Treating Depression-related Asthma Early Phase 1
Recruiting NCT03694158 - Investigating Dupilumab's Effect in Asthma by Genotype Phase 4
Terminated NCT04946318 - Study of Safety of CSJ117 in Participants With Moderate to Severe Uncontrolled Asthma Phase 2
Completed NCT04450108 - Vivatmo Pro™ for Fractional Exhaled Nitric Oxide (FeNO) Monitoring in U.S. Asthmatic Patients N/A
Completed NCT03086460 - A Dose Ranging Study With CHF 1531 in Subjects With Asthma (FLASH) Phase 2
Completed NCT01160224 - Oral GW766944 (Oral CCR3 Antagonist) Phase 2
Completed NCT03186209 - Efficacy and Safety Study of Benralizumab in Patients With Uncontrolled Asthma on Medium to High Dose Inhaled Corticosteroid Plus LABA (MIRACLE) Phase 3
Completed NCT02502734 - Effect of Inhaled Fluticasone Furoate on Short-term Growth in Paediatric Subjects With Asthma Phase 3
Completed NCT01715844 - L-Citrulline Supplementation Pilot Study for Overweight Late Onset Asthmatics Phase 1
Terminated NCT04993443 - First-In-Human Study to Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability, Immunogenicity, and Pharmacokinetics of LQ036 Phase 1
Completed NCT02787863 - Clinical and Immunological Efficiency of Bacterial Vaccines at Adult Patients With Bronchopulmonary Pathology Phase 4
Recruiting NCT06033833 - Long-term Safety and Efficacy Evaluation of Subcutaneous Amlitelimab in Adult Participants With Moderate-to-severe Asthma Who Completed Treatment Period of Previous Amlitelimab Asthma Clinical Study Phase 2
Completed NCT03257995 - Pharmacodynamics, Safety, Tolerability, and Pharmacokinetics of Two Orally Inhaled Indacaterol Salts in Adult Subjects With Asthma. Phase 2
Completed NCT02212483 - Clinical Effectiveness and Economical Impact of Medical Indoor Environment Counselors Visiting Homes of Asthma Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT04872309 - MUlti-nuclear MR Imaging Investigation of Respiratory Disease-associated CHanges in Lung Physiology
Withdrawn NCT01468805 - Childhood Asthma Reduction Study N/A
Recruiting NCT05145894 - Differentiation of Asthma/COPD Exacerbation and Stable State Using Automated Lung Sound Analysis With LungPass Device