Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02306122 |
Other study ID # |
1010000295 |
Secondary ID |
7RC4AG039072-02 |
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
March 2011 |
Est. completion date |
February 2014 |
Study information
Verified date |
December 2021 |
Source |
Brown University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This study is a pilot test of an intervention that delivers timely diagnostic information
about medication nonadherence to doctors, and then offers the services of clinical
pharmacists to treat these nonadherence problems. Participating doctors will be notified when
a patient is 10 days late refilling a medication for diabetes, hypertension, or
hypercholesterolemia. In one randomization arm the pharmacist will contact the patient as the
default option (with no action required by the doctor), and in the other the pharmacist will
contact the patient only if the doctor actively chooses that the pharmacist take action.
Patients of participating doctors will be randomized to 1) one of these two pharmacist
options, 2) an information only control arm in which the doctor gets adherence information
but does not have access to a pharmacist for that patient, and 3) a no information control
arm. The investigators' central hypothesis is that the pharmacist will be consulted more
often when intervention by the pharmacist is the default outcome and that the default
pharmacist intervention will be the most beneficial for adherence outcomes.
Description:
Poor adherence with prescription medications is ubiquitous, regardless of the disease,
medication, patient population, or country studied. It is also expensive - annual costs of
poor adherence in the United States were recently estimated at $290 billion. This problem has
two components: diagnosis and treatment. Regarding diagnosis, doctors' assessments of
patients' adherence are inaccurate, and doctors often do not discuss adherence problems with
their patients. This makes it attractive to use pharmacy claims to identify nonadherence.
While diagnostic data is necessary to solve the non-adherence problem, it is not sufficient.
Once diagnosed, doctors must take action to treat nonadherence. Research shows that simply
giving doctors claims data about nonadherence is ineffective, probably because it is not
clear what action to take, and because the costs in time and energy of taking action are too
great. What is currently lacking is a practical way to effectively integrate this diagnostic
information and treatment expertise into work flows in primary care doctors' offices, and an
effective method of inducing doctors to act on it. Behavioral economics suggests that
barriers to doctors' action may be overcome in a cost effective way by altering the
architecture of choices doctors face.
The long term goal of this research is to develop systems that effectively connect pharmacy
benefits managers (PBMs), primary care doctors, clinical pharmacists, and patients in ways
that improve medication adherence and patients' health outcomes. The overall objective of
this application, which is the next step toward attainment of the investigators long term
goal, is to conduct a pilot test of an intervention that delivers timely diagnostic
information about nonadherence to doctors, and then offers the services of clinical
pharmacists to treat these nonadherence problems. Participating doctors will be notified when
a patient is 10 days late refilling a medication for diabetes, hypertension, or
hypercholesterolemia. Taking advantage of the principle of intelligent choice architecture
from behavioral economics, in one arm the pharmacist will contact the patient as the default
option (with no action required by the doctor), and in the other the pharmacist will contact
the patient only if the doctor actively chooses that the pharmacist take action. Patients of
participating doctors will be randomized to 1) one of these two pharmacist options, 2) an
information only control arm in which the doctor gets adherence information but does not have
access to a pharmacist for that patient, and 3) a no information control arm. The
investigators central hypothesis, which is strongly supported by work in other fields, is
that the pharmacist will be consulted more often when intervention by the pharmacist is the
default outcome and that the default pharmacist intervention will be the most beneficial for
adherence outcomes.
This study is a collaboration between researchers at Brown University, Tufts University,
Harvard University, and Johns Hopkins University; Express Scripts; a large regional
commercial insurer; and a network of primary care doctors in Eastern Massachusetts. The team
is led by Dr. Ira Wilson, an experienced adherence researcher, and includes behavioral and
health economists, and a statistician experienced in adherence issues. The investigators will
accomplish the investigators overall objectives by pursuing the following Specific Aims:
1. Establish and test the technical and communications infrastructure required for the
conduct of this clinical trial. The following steps must occur in a secure environment:
a) Express Scripts notifies the study that a patient is late filling a prescription, b)
the study notifies the doctor, c) the doctor makes a choice about how to respond, and d)
a pharmacist, in some cases, contacts the patient.
2. Conduct and evaluate a clinical trial of an intervention comparing methods of offering
pharmacist services to primary care doctors. Eligible doctors and patients will be
randomized to a) pharmacist services under one of two choice architecture conditions
(default or choice), b) adherence information only, or c) no information; further
randomization for patients in the experimental arms will occur where the patient's
HMO/PPO status will be revealed to the physician, or not. Outcomes include medication
adherence, duration of nonadherence event, and physician participant behavioral
outcomes.