Medication Adherence Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of a Multi-Component Behavior Change Technique Intervention on Medication Adherence Among Individuals on Primary Prevention Statin Therapy: A Dose-Finding Pilot Study
The purpose of this project is to identify the minimum effective dose (MED) of a multi-component behavioral change intervention required to increase levels of medication adherence among participants on primary prevention statin therapy who are at elevated risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD). The intervention will be comprised of 5 BCTs which have previously shown to be effective on increasing health behaviors: Goal Setting, Action Planning, Self-Monitoring, Feedback, and Prompts/Cues. Participants will complete a 2-week run-in period where medication adherence levels will be measured using a smart pill bottle and physical activity (PA) will be measured using Fitbit wearable devices. Then 42 participants will be randomized into 14 cohorts of 3 participants each for the intervention period. During the intervention period, participants will receive a multi-BCT intervention, the length of which varies between 1 and 10 weeks depending on the assigned dose. Assignment to doses will utilize a modified version of the Time-to-Event Continual Reassessment Method (TiTE-CRM) methodology to adjust the dose for each cohort based on the results from the previous cohort. After the intervention, there will be a 2-week follow-up period. The MED will be defined as the smallest BCT dose (defined by weeks of intervention) associated with 80% of participants having a 20% medication adherence increase between the run-in and the follow-up periods.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 42 |
Est. completion date | September 30, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | September 30, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Ages 18 or older; - Northwell Health employee/affiliate; - Ambulatory without limitations: has never been advised by a clinician that increasing low-intensity walking would be unsafe; - Prescribed statin medication; - Self-reported low levels of adherence to statin medications; - Access to and capable of using a smart cellular phone; - After 2 week run-in, objectively-verified low levels of adherence to statin medications (<60% of days using statin as prescribed) as documented by electronic pill bottles; - English speaking. Exclusion Criteria: - Age less than 18 years; - Not a Northwell Health employee/affiliate - Non-ambulatory or unsafe/not recommended to participate in a walking program - Not prescribed statin medication; - Does not use or not willing to use Vivo Health as a pharmacy for prescription fills; - History of CVD; - Inability to comply with study protocol during 2 week run-in; - Does not speak English; - Unavailable for follow-up; - Cognitive impairment; - Severe mental illness (e.g., bipolar disorder or schizophrenia); - Pregnancy |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Institute of Health System Science | New York | New York |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Northwell Health | National Institute on Aging (NIA) |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Between-person heterogeneity in Treatment Response. | Participant heterogeneity in amount of time required to reach a successful increase in medication adherence (defined as an increase of 20% in taking statin medication as prescribed over a 2-week period relative to the run-in period) will be examined. Proportion of days taking statin medication as prescribed will be calculated for each 2-week block during the intervention and follow-up periods. Proportion of days adherent in these blocks will be compared with the proportion of days adherent in the run-in period. Once a successful increase has been detected, the time to achieve this treatment response will be recorded. Differences in duration to successful increases in statin adherence will be examined between participants using mixed effects regression models. | Medication adherence will be assessed continuously via smart pill bottle and adherence will be reported daily. Statin adherence will be averaged during the 2-weeks of run-in and by 2-week blocks until the end of the follow-up period (5-14 weeks). | |
Primary | Success or failure for change in Medication Adherence. | Participant medication adherence increase will be assessed between run-in and follow-up periods using the smart pill bottle. A successful adherence increase is defined as average daily adherence to statin medications in the 2-week follow-up period being higher by 20% or more than in the 2-week run-in period. The minimum effective dose (MED) will be defined as the smallest BCT dose duration associated with 80% of participants receiving that dose having a successful statin adherence increase between the run-in and the follow-up periods. | Medication adherence will be assessed continuously via the smart pill bottle and adherence will be calculated daily. The change in proportion of days adherent will be compared between the run-in and follow-up periods (5-14 weeks from run-in). | |
Secondary | Within-person change in Medication Adherence. | Participant adherence to stain medication will be assessed continuously using a smart electronic pill bottle. Daily medication adherence will be recorded for each participant across the full duration of the study. Changes in medication between run-in and intervention phases will be compared using Generalized Linear Mixed Model Analyses. | Medication adherence will be assessed continuously via a smart pill bottle and adherence will be calculated daily. Change over time will be examined between the baseline, intervention, and follow-up periods (5-14 weeks from run-in). | |
Secondary | Within-person change in Self-Efficacy. | Self-efficacy will be assessed using an adapted version of the PROMIS Item Bank v1.0, Self-Efficacy for Managing Chronic Conditions, Managing Medications and Treatment Short Form 8a, a 7-item measure assessing patient's capabilities to take their medications. Items are scored on a 1 "I am not at all confident" to 5 "I am very confident" scale. Scale scores will be converted to T-scores using methods from the PROMIS scoring manual based on item response theory, with higher scores indicating higher levels of self-efficacy. | Self-efficacy will be assessed at the completion of baseline and will be assessed every 2 weeks until the end of the follow-up period (5-14 weeks from run-in). | |
Secondary | Within-person change in Behavioral Automaticity. | Behavioral automaticity will be assessed using an adapted version of the 4-item Self-Report Behavioral Automaticity Index (SRBAI) which assesses automaticity of behavior. Items are scored on a 1 "Strongly Disagree" to 7 "Strongly agree" scale, and summed to create a total score, with higher scores indicating greater behavioral automaticity. | Behavioral automaticity will be assessed at the completion of baseline and will be assessed every 2 weeks until the end of the follow-up period (5-14 weeks from run-in). | |
Secondary | Within-person change in Discrepancy in Behavior. | This will be assessed with a single item stating "How large is the difference between your current medication taking behavior and the frequency of medication use prescribed by your doctor?" This item is rated on a scale of 1 "Not at all different" to 7 "Very different", with higher scores indicating greater levels of discrepancy in behavior. | Feedback Processes will be assessed at the completion of baseline and will be assessed every 2 weeks until the end of the follow-up period (5-14 weeks from run-in). | |
Secondary | Within-person change in Motivation. | Motivation will be assessed with a message stating "I feel motivated to take my statin medications exactly as my doctor prescribed." Motivation will be rated on a scale of 1 "Not at all true" to 7 "Very True", with higher scores indicating greater levels of motivation. | Motivation will be assessed at the completion of baseline and will be assessed every 2 weeks until the end of the follow-up period (5-14 weeks from run-in). | |
Secondary | Within-person change in Environmental Context and Resources. | Environmental context and resources will be assessed using a list of 4 potential environmental barriers to medication adherence taken from Fung and colleagues. Barriers are rated on a 1 "Not often at all" to 5 (Very often) scale, and summed to create a total score, with higher scores indicating that the listed barriers had greater effects on patient nonadherence to statins. | Environmental Context and Resources will be assessed at the completion of baseline and will be assessed every 2 weeks until the end of the follow-up period (5-14 weeks from run-in). | |
Secondary | Within-person change in Daily Steps. | Participant steps will be assessed continuously using a Fitbit mobile device. Daily steps for participants will be aggregated by run-in and follow-up periods to generate average daily steps in each period. Changes in daily steps between run-in and intervention periods will be compared using Generalized Linear Mixed Model Analyses. | Steps will be assessed continuously via worn activity tracker and step counts will be calculated daily. Change over time will be examined between the baseline, intervention, and follow-up periods (5-14 weeks from run-in). |
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