Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Terminated
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03441542 |
Other study ID # |
8223 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Terminated |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
July 23, 2018 |
Est. completion date |
February 15, 2019 |
Study information
Verified date |
May 2022 |
Source |
National Opinion Research Center |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This study seeks to implement and evaluate a data-driven case navigation system for hepatitis
C virus (HCV) treatment among persons who are either actively injecting drugs or who are
receiving opioid substitution therapy (OST). The study will use data from a previously
developed patient registry system to identify patients for study recruitment, and use monthly
updates of registry data to organize and direct patient navigation services for those
individuals assigned to the treatment group. Patients assigned to the control group will also
be eligible to receive HCV treatment, but will otherwise receive usual care.
This study has a parallel, randomized unblinded, case/control design in which eligible
patients are assigned at baseline to either a registry-directed patient navigation system
(case) or to usual care (control), characterized in terms of demographic and sub-population
variables, and then compared after 12 months on two categories of outcomes; (1) attainment of
care cascade milestones; and (2) treatment initiation, adherence, and virologic response. The
study is designed and powered to answer two primary hypotheses (H1 & H2):
- H1: As compared to those randomized to usual care (control), those randomized to the
registry directed patient navigation arm (case) will be more likely to complete all
pretreatment HCV care milestones as defined by a higher proportion completing all four
pre-treatment care cascade outcomes.
- H2: As compared to the control group, a significantly higher proportion of those
randomized to the case group will achieve a sustained viral response.
Description:
EZ-C's purpose is to determine the effectiveness of patient navigation services during
treatment of hepatitis C compared to usual care among opioid substitution therapy (OST) and
active injecting drug use (IDU) individuals.
To recruit OST and active IDU patients, customized queries will be created to identify
pharmaceutical (methadone, buprenorphine, buprenorphine/naltrexone, naloxone) and diagnostic
(ICD-10 codes for heroin poisoning, history of heroin abuse, long term current use of opiate
analgesic, opioid dependence, and potentially others) indicators of OST or active injecting
drug use. These codes will be implemented into the Grady HCV registry to flag and identify
OST or possible active injecting drug use individuals that are HCV positive at Grady Health
Systems.
Recruitment will consist of an initial letter describing the study and informing patients of
their possible eligibility as well as informed consent documentation. This letter will be
followed by up to three phone calls per patient from the patient navigator until a full
sample of OST and active injecting drug users have been recruited. Once enrolled, patients
will be randomly assigned into either the control or intervention group. Although there is no
compensation for participating in the study, all patients that are recruited will receive
treatment at no cost.
Once the study begins enrolling, the researchers will create spreadsheet reports of patients
in the intervention group (those who are receiving patient navigation services) containing
their HCV care information, such as antibody results, viral load test results and
prescription refill information. Based on this spreadsheet, the researchers will develop a
monthly task list for the patient navigator with patient by patient care cascade and
treatment milestones that need to be accomplished per patient in the intervention group. The
researchers will then deliver the spreadsheet and the task list to the Grady Liver Clinic
Director who will use it to direct and supervise the activities of the patient navigator. The
patient navigator will actively engage with those in the intervention group throughout the
study and send reminders of their next steps in the treatment process/care cascade. The
patient navigator will not engage with those in the control group as they will receive only
usual care.
The intervention will last 12 months for each patient in both the case and control groups.
After collecting data for the 80 patients at the end of the study, the researchers will
analyze the data to determine the effectiveness of patient navigation services compared to
those receiving usual care among IDU and OST individuals.