Chronic Disease Clinical Trial
— MaJ?Official title:
Feasibility Study of the Medication Review With Follow up Service for Patients With Polypharmacy in Swiss Community Pharmacies
In Switzerland, it is estimated that 20,000 people are hospitalized each year as a result of drug related problems (DRP). Community pharmacies (CP) are well positioned to identify and manage such DRPs in a timely manner. In Switzerland, no pharmacy service that focus on the management of DRPs is currently recognized and remunerated. A new service, medication review with follow up (MaJ? for the acronym in french), has been developed. It is focused on DRPs related to self-medication and medication management at home and it includes a systematic review of the patient's treatment. Objective: To evaluate the impact of the MaJ? service for adults with polypharmacy in Swiss CP for the identification and management of DRPs. A pre-post intervention study will be carried out in CPs in the canton of Vaud for 15 months. Volunteer pharmacists will include adults with a prescription for at least four chronic and systemic drugs since at least three months. Trained pharmacists will conduct structured consultations with a 6-months interval during the study to deliver the service. The primary outcome is the identification and management of DRPs. Secondary outcomes are patients' knowledge about their treatments, number of expired medications and description of pharmaceutical interventions. The study has been approved and will be supported by Department of Health and Social Affairs in the canton of Vaud and the Cantonal Health Authorities. The Ethics Committee (CER-VD) concluded that the study does not fall under the Human Research Act. It will begin in spring 2022 in 19 to 35 pharmacies that will recruit at least 162 patients after randomization of eligible patients through a sequence of computer-generated random numbers. Ad-hoc tools (medication management plan) and validated tools (PharmDISC tool, patient knowledge tool) will guide pharmacists throughout the consultation. Educational training and support for pharmacists will increase quality of service provision and fidelity of study protocol. A sub analysis will be carried out for those patients included who are 65 years old or over in order to target the intervention to a specific group of patients with higher risk for DRPs. This study will evaluate the impact of a new service that includes validated, structured and standardized interventions, training and supervision for CP staff, non-prescription medication evaluation and use of home-based patient records. MaJ? is an enhanced service designed to overcome those barriers found in the implementation process of medication review services.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 162 |
Est. completion date | September 30, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | June 30, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Adults with a prescription for at least four chronic and systemic drugs for at least the last three months. Exclusion Criteria: - Patients suffering from dementia, psychiatric disorder, or other health condition that hinders obtaining informed consent and/or conducting the consultations with the pharmacist. - Patients who disagree meeting the pharmacist for the three consultations during the study with a 6-months interval. - Patients who are not able to bring all their medication to the community pharmacy. - Patients who cannot speak and read French. - Patients who does not allow the pharmacist contacting the general medical practitioner to inform him/her about possible drug related problems. - Patients who will not consent of participating in the study. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Switzerland | Unisanté, Center of Primay Care and Public Health | Lausanne | Vaud |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Center for Primary Care and Public Health (Unisante), University of Lausanne, Switzerland | Canton of Vaud ("État de Vaud"), Pharmaceutical Society of the Vaud Canton ("SVPh: Société Vaudoise de pharmacie") |
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* Note: There are 33 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in number of drug related problems (DRPs) | Number of DRPs detected by the pharmacist during the pharmacist-patient consultation. Pharmacists will complete the management plan and PharmDISC tool at all consultations with the patient (three consultations with a 6-months interval). It will be assessed by comparing the differences between the first and second consultations and the first and third consultations. Total number of DRP and mean per patient will be calculated. | At three points during the study: 1. First pharmacist-patient consultation, 2. Second consultation (6 months after the first one) and 3. Third consultation (12 months after the first one). | |
Primary | Change in DRPs | Pharmacists will complete the PharmDISC tool which includes:
Therapy choice: no concordance with guidelines, contraindication, interaction, drug not indicated, duplication, adverse effect, incomplete patient documentation. Drug choice: inappropriate dosage form. Dose choice: underdose/overdose, inappropriate monitoring, dose not adjusted to organ function. Drug use: inappropriate timing of frequency of administration, inappropriate use method. Therapy duration: inappropriate therapy duration. Logistics: prescribed drug not available, error in medication process. Patient: insufficient adherence, insufficient knowledge, burden due to therapy. Other PharmDISC tool has also classification related to health problems: treatment effectiveness, untreated indication, safety of treatment, treatment costs, dissatisfaction/problems of the patient. PharmDISC tool has also classification related to type of problem: manifest, potential. |
At three points during the study: 1. First pharmacist-patient consultation, 2. Second pharmacist-patient consultation (6 months after the first one) and 3. Third pharmacist-patient consultation (12 months after the first one) | |
Secondary | Change in number of medications removed | Medication expired or non taken by the patient. This can be accomplished after reviewing the medication brought by the patient to the pharmacy. Total number, mean per patient and percentage in relation to the total medication brought by the patient and accepted by the patient to be removed after pharmacist-patient consultation. | At three points during the study: 1. First pharmacist-patient consultation, 2. Second pharmacist-patient consultation (6 months after the first one) and 3. Third pharmacist-patient consultation (12 months after the first one) | |
Secondary | Change in patients' knowledge | Medication knowledge evaluation tool with 4 questions (medication cited/medication known/why taking the medication/posology known). The patient scores 1 point if he/she knows the correct answer and 0 points if he/she does not know. Score goes from 0 (patient does not know the medication) to 4 (patient completely knows the medication) for each medication that the patient is taking. | At three points during the study: 1. First pharmacist-patient consultation, 2. Second pharmacist-patient consultation (6 months after the first one) and 3. Third pharmacist-patient consultation (12 months after the first one) | |
Secondary | Change in number of pharmaceutical interventions | Number of interventions carried out by the pharmacist with patients and/or general medical practitioners to solve drug related problems. | At three points during the study: 1. First pharmacist-patient consultation, 2. Second pharmacist-patient consultation (6 months after the first one) and 3. Third pharmacist-patient consultation (12 months after the first one) | |
Secondary | Change in pharmaceutical interventions | Classification of interventions will be made by the pharmacist using the PharmDISC tool:
Counselling of patient Application instruction (training) Delivery of an adherence aid (ex. pill box) inclusive counselling Therapy started Therapy stopped/no delivery Substitution Dose adjustment Therapy monitoring Optimization of administration Change of administration way Adjustment of the delivery amount (package size, quantity of packages, etc.) Information to the GP Clarification in the case notes (history) Report to pharmacovigilance center Other |
At three points during the study: 1. First pharmacist-patient consultation, 2. Second pharmacist-patient consultation (6 months after the first one) and 3. Third pharmacist-patient consultation (12 months after the first one) |
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