Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Active, not recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02416479
Other study ID # 0039040
Secondary ID
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase Phase 3
First received
Last updated
Start date June 2014
Est. completion date December 2018

Study information

Verified date May 2018
Source University of Missouri, Kansas City
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

With kidney transplant (KT) recipients as our exemplar population, our goal is to develop and test interventions that increase medication adherence (MA) in chronically ill adults. Among adult KT recipients, non-adherence to immunosuppressive medications (MNA) is the leading predictor of poor outcomes, including rejection, kidney loss, and death. An alarming one-third of KT patients experience MNA even though the problem is preventable. Adherence intervention studies have proven marginally effective for those with acute and chronic illnesses and ineffective for adult KT recipients. Using a randomized controlled trial design with an attention-control group, this R01 will test an innovative 6-month SystemCHANGE intervention to enhance immunosuppressive MA in adult non-adherent KT recipients. This intervention shows great promise for increasing MA with a large effect size of 1.4 in our pilot study. Grounded in the socio-ecological model, SystemCHANGE seeks to systematically improve MA behaviors by identifying and shaping routines, involving supportive others in routines, and using medication taking feedback through small patient-lead experiments to change and maintain behavior. The Medication Event Monitoring System cap, which contains microelectronics that record the date and time of the cap removal, will be used to measure MA. Persistence of the MA behavior change will be examined by evaluating the difference in MA between the two groups during the 6-month maintenance phase. Mediators and moderators of MA will be examined. Health outcomes will be compared and a cost-effectiveness analysis will be conducted.


Description:

SPECIFIC AIMS For adult kidney transplant (KT) patients, the leading predictor of rejection, kidney loss, death and their attendant costs is immunosuppressive medications nonadherence (MNA). An alarming one-third of KT recipients experience this preventable problem. According to meta-analysis, predictors of MNA are nonwhite ethnicity, poorer social support and poorer perceived health. Patients' most frequent barrier to adhering to immunosuppressive medication is forgetting. 9 Even minor deviations from adherence have shown negative effects, though the precise extent of poor outcomes stemming from nonadherence is not clear. Traditionally, intervention studies aimed at boosting adherence target cognition (knowledge, attitudes, beliefs) and behavioral skills. However, these have proven marginally effective for individuals with acute and chronic illnesses and ineffective for adult KT recipients. In a sample of KT recipients, we propose to test the innovative and successful SystemCHANGE intervention, which is grounded in the socio-ecological model. This approach is a paradigm shift in behavioral interventions because it seeks to redesign the system of the interpersonal environment and daily routines linked to health behavior, rather than to alter individuals' efforts to change their behavior. Using a four-pronged, patient-centered approach, we will (1) assess individual systems (including important others who shape medication taking), how they influence medication taking and their proposals for improving medication adherence, (2) implement the proposed individual systems solutions for improving adherence, (3) track adherence data, and (4) evaluate adherence data through small experiments. In our pilot study, this intervention yielded a large effect size of 1.4.

This study's innovation lies in its use of a socio-ecological model known as SystemCHANGE, which differs greatly from previous cognitive and behavioral skills-focused interventions for improving medication adherence. This will be the first rigorous evaluation of SystemCHANGE with a diverse sample of KT recipients and long-term follow up. This study presents a unique opportunity to evaluate moderators and mediators of adherence and has potential, based upon pilot work, to have immediate "dose" impact. As such, it could hold great promise as an intervention that translates very well into practice settings. Our 6-month SystemCHANGE intervention (also referred to as "intervention") seeks to enhance adherence to immunosuppressive medication among adult KT recipients who are non-adherent. The study is a randomized controlled trial with an attention-control intervention (also referred to as "control") to determine persistence of medication adherence behavior change and differences in adherence between the two groups during the 6-month maintenance phase.

Primary Aim (PA):

PA: To determine whether the intervention is more effective than control in increasing medication adherence in adult KT recipients at the completion of the intervention and maintenance phases.

Hypothesis: Adult KT recipients participating in the intervention will have higher immunosuppressive adherence rates than those participating in the control at the completion of intervention and maintenance phases.

Secondary Aim (Sec):

SA: To examine the patterns of medication adherence in adult KT recipients in both groups.

Research question (RQ): When does the intervention become effective (e.g., what "dose" is needed)? RQ: What is the pattern of decay in adherence over time in both groups?

Exploratory Aims (EA):

EA1: To determine whether the intervention is more effective than the control in decreasing poor health outcomes (e.g. increasing creatinine/BUN, infection, acute/chronic rejection, graft loss, death, hospitalizations, length of hospital stay, and healthcare appointments).

Hypothesis: At one year, there will be differential levels of poor outcomes, with the intervention demonstrating lower levels of poor outcomes than the control.

EA2: To evaluate the role of potential mediators and moderators of medication adherence and health outcomes in adult KT recipients in the intervention and those in the control.

Hypothesis: Incorporating potential mediators and moderators of the intervention (e.g., nonwhite ethnicity, perceived social support, perceived health status, personal systems behavior) will increase the medication adherence variance explained by the intervention.

EA3: To determine if the intervention is cost-effective. Hypothesis: The cost-effectiveness ratio for the intervention will be less than for the control.

Each year, 35.6 KT recipients per 100 are non-adherent with their medications, which is the primary cause of post-transplant morbidity. Thus, the need for effective interventions is compelling: Decreasing transplant complications from MNA will reduce costs and make additional kidneys available to those waiting for transplants by reducing the number of KT recipients who must rejoin the organ list. This project builds on our research team's previous adherence work, including a SystemCHANGE intervention pilot study that addresses Healthy People 2020 initiatives of reducing chronic kidney disease complications, disability, death, and costs by optimizing transplant medication adherence and increasing the number of patients who receive a transplant.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Active, not recruiting
Enrollment 84
Est. completion date December 2018
Est. primary completion date December 2018
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

1. age 18 years or older,

2. prescribed at least 1 immunosuppressive medication taken twice a day,

3. functioning KT (not on dialysis),

4. has received a kidney-only transplant,

5. agreement from the transplant physician and nephrologist that individual is able to participate in the study,

6. able to speak, hear, and understand English as determined by the ability to participate and comprehend conversation about potential inclusion in the study,

7. able to open a MEMS cap as assessed by the Research Assistant (RA) asking if there is any problem with opening pill bottle caps,

8. able to administer immunosuppressive medications to self,

9. has a telephone or has access to a telephone,

10. has no cognitive impairment as determined by a score of 4 or greater on the 6-item Telephone Mental Status Screen Derived from the Mini-Mental Status Exam,

11. has no other diagnoses that may shorten life span, such as metastatic cancer,

12. is not currently hospitalized,

13. receives post-transplant care by the Missouri or Tennessee transplant programs.

Exclusion Criteria:

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
SystemCHANGE
SystemCHANGE self-management supports patient-designed, interventionist-guided, small experiments using Deming's Plan-Do-Check-Act cycle26 to: (1) assess individual systems (including important others who shape medication taking), how they influence medication taking and their proposals for improving medication adherence, (2) implement the proposed individual systems' solutions to improve adherence, (3) track adherence data, and (4) evaluate adherence data.
Patient-education attention control
The 6-month Patient education attention-control (AC) intervention includes 6 transplant educational materials, covering healthy post-transplant behavior, developed by the International Transplant Nurses Society. The RA calls Pps at 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 months to review the brochure information and answer any questions about it.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States University of Missouri-Kansas City Kansas City Missouri

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Cynthia Russell University of Missouri-Columbia, University of Tennessee

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Medication Adherence Change from Baseline to 6 Months Medication adherence score of .85 or greater 6 months
Primary Medication Adherence Change from 6 Months to 12 Months Medication adherence score of .85 or greater 12 months
Primary Medication Adherence Change from Baseline to 12 Months Medication adherence score of .85 or greater 12
Secondary Creatinine Creatinine blood level 12 months
Secondary Infection Blood, sputum, and/or urine culture positive for an abnormal organism 12 months
Secondary Acute rejection Biposy proven 12 months
Secondary Chronic rejection Biopsy proven 12 months
Secondary BUN BUN blood level 12 months
Secondary Kidney graph loss 3-day dose of intravenous prednisone 12 months
Secondary Death Death documented by transplant team 12 months
Secondary Cost effectiveness Resource use costs of both Interventions 12 months
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT02369354 - Transplant Social Worker Support for Live Kidney Donation in African Americans N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT02225782 - Trial to Compare 1.0 Versus 2.0 mg Alteplase (tPA) Dosing in Restoring Hemodialysis Catheter Function Phase 4
Completed NCT00499187 - Fanconi Syndrome Due to ARVs in HIV-Infected Persons Phase 4
Withdrawn NCT00585429 - Evaluation of Kidney Disease in Liver Transplant Recipients N/A
Completed NCT00379899 - ADVANCE: Study to Evaluate Cinacalcet Plus Low Dose Vitamin D on Vascular Calcification in Subjects With Chronic Kidney Disease Receiving Hemodialysis Phase 4
Completed NCT00183248 - Using Donor Stem Cells and Alemtuzumab to Prevent Organ Rejection in Kidney Transplant Patients Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT00001835 - Oxaliplatin in Cancer Patients With Impaired Kidney Function Phase 1
Completed NCT01331941 - A Pharmacokinetic Study of AMG 386 in Cancer Subjects With Normal and Impaired Renal Function Phase 1
Terminated NCT00436748 - Study to Assess Darbepoetin Alfa Dosing for the Correction of Anemia in Pediatric Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease Phase 3
Completed NCT01467466 - Prevention of Serious Adverse Events Following Angiography Phase 3
Completed NCT01235936 - Safety and Efficacy Study for AKB-6548 in Participants With Chronic Kidney Disease and Anemia Phase 2
Completed NCT01974999 - A Retrospective Multicenter Study to Determine 5-Year Clinical Outcomes in Subjects Previously Enrolled in the CTOT-01 Study
Completed NCT01947829 - Interdialytic Kt/V Variability Measurement With Adimea (IVP STUDY) N/A
Recruiting NCT01240564 - The Nephrotic Syndrome Study Network (NEPTUNE) N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01228903 - Uric Acid and the Endothelium is CKD N/A
Completed NCT00734357 - Comparative Investigation of Intravenously Administered Omnipaque and Isovue: Effects on Serum Creatinine Concentration in Outpatients N/A
Completed NCT00781417 - Prevention of Secondary Hyperparathyroidism With Vitamin D in Stage II/III Chronic Kidney Disease N/A
Completed NCT00096915 - Study Evaluating Darbepoetin Alfa in Subjects With Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) Receiving Dialysis Phase 3
Completed NCT00094484 - Cinacalcet HCl in Chronic Kidney Disease Subjects With Secondary Hyperparathyroidism Not Receiving Dialysis Phase 3
Completed NCT00185159 - Olmesartan Medoxomil in Diabetes Mellitus Phase 3