Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

(i) To develop a behavioural intervention that supports healthcare professionals to effectively deliver lifestyle behaviour change of patients undergoing liver transplantation

(ii) To assess the acceptability and feasibility of the behavioural intervention during routine practice


Clinical Trial Description

BACKGROUND

Liver transplantation is the most effective treatment for decompensated chronic liver disease and is associated with improvements in life expectancy and quality of life(1). Recent advances in immunosuppressive therapy; greater surgical and anaesthetic expertise and optimised risk assessment procedures have shown to be associated with improvements in 90 day, 1 and 5 year survival (2). However, non-liver causes of death are on the increase with malignancy (22%), cardiovascular disease (11%), infection (9%) and renal failure (6%) becoming leading causes of death at one year (3)

It is well recognised that liver transplantation is associated with the onset of a number of conditions that increase risk of early mortality, including new onset diabetes, hypertension and dyslipidaemia (4,5). These conditions have the potential to be prevented or improved by behavioural intervention targeting health and lifestyle behaviours including physical activity, diet, smoking and medication adherence (6). Lifestyle factors are central to both survival on the waiting list and long-term post transplant survival. Therefore it is important to support patients to make positive and sustainable lifestyle behaviour changes. However, this represents a complex medical challenge because rarely are clinical teams trained to target lifestyle behaviour change in a meaningful/personalised way.

AIMS OF THE STUDY

The aim is to develop a behavioural intervention that can be used by all medical personnel involved in the care of patients being assessed for transplantation, whilst listed for transplantation and post transplantation to improve long-term outcomes. The intervention will be co-developed by clinicians and patients to ensure it is fit for purpose. Healthcare professionals will be trained to target a range of health and lifestyle behaviours using evidence-based behavioural strategies. It is hoped this will lead to improvements in long-term survival by reducing modifiable risk factors for mortality.

OBJECTIVES

This study will develop and assess acceptability and feasibility of a multifaceted behaviour change intervention. The intervention will be designed to train healthcare professionals to use behavioural strategies to target key lifestyle behaviours in the context of liver transplantation, and to equip patients with behavioural skills to make positive changes to a range of lifestyle behaviours. In reality, this could be the most cost effective model to be able to enable lifestyle change for transplant patients. These healthcare professionals are front line staff and work with high volumes of transplant patients.

PRIMARY RESEARCH QUESTION Is a multifaceted behavioural intervention co-developed by healthcare professionals and patients acceptable and feasible and can it be delivered faithfully during routine clinical practice?

Objectives The objectives of this study are:- i) To co-develop an evidence-based, multifaceted behavioural intervention for delivery during routine clinical consultations ii) To develop a training programme that equips clinicians with the knowledge, skills and confidence to deliver a behavioural intervention during routine clinical practice iii) To determine whether the behavioural intervention is acceptable and feasible to both healthcare professionals and patients iv) To assess whether the behavioural intervention can be delivered faithfully during routine clinical practice v) To optimise the behavioural intervention based on feedback from clinicians and patients.

vi) To assess whether the intervention impacts positively on clinical outcomes (e.g., blood pressure, HbA1c levels) vii) To inform the design of a large randomised controlled trial if appropriate ;


Study Design

Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Supportive Care


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02696655
Study type Interventional
Source Newcastle-upon-Tyne Hospitals NHS Trust
Contact James Prentis, MBBS
Phone 01912336161
Email james.prentis@nuth.nhs.uk
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date February 2016
Completion date February 2018

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT02798861 - Controlled Attenuation Parameter (CAP) in Liver Allografts
Completed NCT01968395 - Pharmacokinetics of Caspofungin After One Dose in Patients With Liver Failure Phase 4
Completed NCT01437969 - Pharmacogenomics Study on IL28B Genetic Variants in Italian Patients With HCV Infection naïve to Treatment.
Recruiting NCT00155376 - Intravenous-Morphine and Glucagon-Usage Enhanced MR Cholangiography Phase 4
Recruiting NCT00172705 - Quantitative Diagnosis of Fatty Liver by Dual Energy CT Technique N/A
Completed NCT04185454 - Estimation of Minimum Efficacy Daily Dose of Jarlsberg Cheese N/A
Completed NCT02506335 - Liver Function Measured by HepQuant-SHUNT in the Prediction of Outcomes in Patients With Heart Disease Early Phase 1
Completed NCT02520609 - Dynamic Post-Prandial Metabolism in Patients With Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
Completed NCT02306018 - Evaluation of a New Calibrated Pulse Wave Analysis Method(EV1000™/volumeView™) for Cardiac Output Monitoring in Adult Liver Transplantation N/A
Completed NCT01988753 - Non-invasive Biomarkers of Fibrosis in Pediatric Liver Diseases
Completed NCT01970904 - Pharmacokinetics, Pharmacodynamics and Safety of DEB025 Plus Ribavirin in Chronic Hepatitis C Genotype 2 and 3 Treatment naïve Patients N/A
Terminated NCT00741117 - Conjugated Hyperbilirubinemia and Pulse Oximetry N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT01483248 - Human Menstrual Blood-derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells for Patients With Liver Cirrhosis Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT00245830 - Ischemic Preconditioning of Liver in Cadaver Donors N/A
Completed NCT00074386 - Kidney and Liver Transplantation in People With HIV N/A
Completed NCT02329821 - Change of Lactate Concentration During Hartmann Solution Infusion for Hepatic Resection N/A
Completed NCT01303549 - Anidulafungin vs Amphotericin B Safety in High Risk Hepatic Transplant Recipients Phase 4
Completed NCT01650181 - Effects of Siliphos-Selenium-Methionine-Alpha Lipoic Acid in Patients With Fatty Liver and Non-alcoholic Steatohepatitis Phase 4
Completed NCT00799851 - A Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Band Ligation and Cyanoacrylate Injection for Esophageal Varices Phase 4
Completed NCT00058890 - Gabapentin to Treat Itch in Patients With Liver Disease Phase 3