Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Terminated

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05751772
Other study ID # 2022-00731
Secondary ID
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date December 13, 2022
Est. completion date January 31, 2024

Study information

Verified date March 2024
Source University Hospital, Geneva
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The objective is to evaluate the impact of a pharmacist-led therapeutic education intervention on the knowledge of hospitalized heart failure patients. The knowledge score on heart failure disease and medications will be compared between two groups one month after hospitalization. The intervention group will receive a therapeutic education intervention and usual hospital care and the control group will receive only usual hospital care.


Description:

Heart failure patients are at risk of decompensation of their disease and frequent hospitalizations. Poor adherence to their treatment may be the cause. By improving the knowledge of hospitalized heart failure patients about their disease and their medications, it is expected that these patients will adhere better to their heart failure drug therapy and benefit from a better effectiveness of their treatment. This could promote an improvement in their quality of life, a decrease in their risk of disease complications and even an increase in their life expectancy. The objective of this research project is to deploy a therapeutic teaching intervention at the bedside of decompensated and hospitalized heart failure patients, associated with follow-up by the pharmacist at discharge from the hospital, and to measure its impact on knowledge change (primary endpoint), on their beliefs about medications, on their therapeutic adherence, and on the consumption of unplanned care such as rehospitalizations and emergency room visits (secondary endpoints).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Terminated
Enrollment 38
Est. completion date January 31, 2024
Est. primary completion date January 31, 2024
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Hospitalization in the Department of General Internal Medicine or Cardiology for decompensated heart failure with lowered left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) (=40%) from any cause or mildly lowered LVEF (41-49%) with the presence of heart failure-specific drug therapy - Stability of the patient's clinical condition - = 2 heart failure medications - =18 years - Full capacity of discernment - Absence of cognitive impairment - Ability to speak, understand and read in French - Get a personal telephone - Consent form signed by the participant Exclusion Criteria: - Inability to follow study procedures - Institutionalized persons - Asylum seekers, homeless people, prisoners - Incapacity of judgment and discernment

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Patient therapeutic education
The pharmacist-led therapeutic education intervention on the knowledge of hospitalized heart failure patients is made by a clinical pharmacist and includes: Targeted education on patient needs related to heart failure, heart failure medications and self-care; a pre-discharge interview to consolidate key teaching messages and prepare the patient for their discharge treatment plan; a telephone call the week of discharge to ensure pharmaceutical follow-up between hospital care and return home (continuity of care, transition of care).

Locations

Country Name City State
Switzerland University Hospital of Geneva Geneva

Sponsors (5)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University Hospital, Geneva AstraZeneca, Bayer, Labatec Pharma SA, Vifor Pharma

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Switzerland, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Change in knowledge score Patients' level of knowledge about their disease and heart failure medications before the educational pharmaceutical intervention (pre-test) and immediately after the intervention (post-test n° 1) for the intervention group , as well as at 1 month after hospital discharge (post-test n°2) for the intervention and control group. It will be measured by means of a 17-question questionnaire specifically developed for this project. This level is valued by a minimum score of 0 points and a maximum of 17 points. Higher score means a better level of knowledge. The positive difference between pre-test and post-tes means an increase in knowledge and a negative difference means a decrease in knowledge. at the baseline time (zero time), immediately after therapeutic education intervention and 30 days after hospital discharge
Secondary Change in Beliefs about medicines Score Beliefs about medicines will be measured via the specific Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire (BMQs) score at baseline time (at the inclusion time)(pretest) and at 1 month after hospital discharge (post-test) in both groups.
Scores range from 5 to 25 points for both subscales. The higher the score for the specific need, the more it means that the patient has a strong perception that he needs the drugs to be healthy and live. For specific concerns, the higher the score, the more the patient is concerned about a potential negative effect of taking the medication. A third score can be calculated by subtracting specific concerns from specific needs. This gives a score of -20 to +20. A positive value means that the need for the treatment exceeds the concerns of taking it.
at the baseline time (zero time),30 days after hospital discharge
Secondary Change in Medication Adherence Score Adherence will be assessed with the Three Item Self Report Scale at baseline time (at the inclusion time) (pre-test) and at 1 month after hospital discharge (post-test) in both groups.
This questionnaire consists of 3 questions; one which evaluates the number of days of forgetting to take medication over the last month, one which evaluates the frequency of taking medication according to medical prescription and the third which makes it possible to measure the level of competence in the correct taking of medication that takes ownership of the patient. Responses are converted on a scale of 0 to 100 (0 is the lowest adherence and 100 the highest). An average of the three answers is used to assign the adhesion score. Higher the score is, better the adherence is.
at the baseline time (zero time),30 days after hospital discharge
Secondary Level of satisfaction on therapeutic education Patient satisfaction will be assessed using a 13-questions questionnaire specifically developed for this project, after the education interview to assess the usefulness and quality of the teaching intervention. There is no score related to the questionnaire.
This qualitative assessment will allow us to determine whether this new intervention should be continued and to identify its strengths and weaknesses.
immediately after therapeutic education intervention
Secondary Rehospitalization or emergency room visits The rate of rehospitalization or emergency room visits will be evaluated during the telephone call made by a research assistant at D30 post hospital discharge. The cause of hospitalization will be determined by means of the computerized hospital patient file if he is rehospitalized at the university hospital of Geneva (HUG) or directly to the patient (or his attending physician depending) if he is hospitalized in another hospital. It is interesting to assess whether the patient consumed unplanned care and whether it was related to instability of his heart failure. 30 days after hospital discharge
Secondary Death at 1 month after discharge The mortality rate will be assessed in both groups. This information can be collected from the participants' computerized patient records if mentioned or from the participants' relatives or attending physician. 30 days after hospital discharge
Secondary Patient experiment and feeling after discharge The patient's experience and feelings upon returning home will be assessed during a telephone call between D3 and D7 after the patient's discharge from the hospital with open questions (no validated questionnaire is used). The objective will be to identify the patient's needs, their feelings about going home, what they liked, what they missed to readjust the counseling to the patient. 7 days after hospital discharge
Secondary CardioMeds app usability Use and usability of the mobile smartphone application (CardioMeds® ) will be explored by the research assistant during the telephone call at D30 post hospital discharge using a validated standardized questionnaire (System Usability Scale = SUS).
SUS gives a single score representing a measure composite of the general user-friendliness of the studied service.
The score ranges from 0 to 100.It is generally considered that a score is "good" from 75, fair or fair between 50 and 75. A score below 50 reveals major problems in terms of customer satisfaction.
30 days after hospital discharge
Secondary Self-Care of Heart Failure Index Self-care skills of patients using CardioMeds® will be explored using a validated score, the Self-Care of Heart Failure Index composed of 22 questions to measure the effect of this application on patients' level of empowerment in their care. The scale is subdivided in three measurement : maintenance score, management score and self-care confidence score. Each scale score is standardized to a 0 to 100 range. A score of =70 can be used as the cut-point to judge self-care adequacy, 30 days after hospital discharge
Secondary Level of satisfaction on global pharmaceutical care This second satisfaction questionnaire consisting of 8 questions specifically developed for this project, will be sent at 1 month after hospital discharge to assess the patient's overall satisfaction with the pharmaceutical care follow-up provided. There is no score related to the questionnaire.
This qualitative assessment will allow us to determine whether the hospital pharmaceutical care
30 days after hospital discharge
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04709640 - Pilot Study to Improve Medication Management in Older Adults N/A
Completed NCT03257579 - Myocardial Infarction Prescription Duration Adherence Study N/A
Completed NCT05376397 - Testing THRIVE 365 for Black Sexual Minority Men (On The Daily) N/A
Withdrawn NCT03427008 - A Pilot Study of mDOT for Immunosuppressant Adherence in Adult Kidney Transplant Recipients N/A
Completed NCT03805451 - Life Steps for PrEP for Youth N/A
Withdrawn NCT03292393 - Social Norms and Antihypertensive Medication Adherence N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT02876848 - A Novel E-Health Approach in Optimizing Treatment for Seniors (OPTIMUM Study) N/A
Completed NCT02823795 - The Supporting Patient Activation in Transition to Home Intervention N/A
Completed NCT02914730 - Insulin Dosing Practices in Persons With Diabetes on Multiple Daily Injections
Completed NCT02066935 - Non-adherence to Immunosuppressives in Kidney Transplantation in Brazil Multicenter Study
Completed NCT02797262 - Measuring and Monitoring Adherence to ART With Pill Ingestible Sensor System N/A
Completed NCT01934608 - The Effect of Synching Prescription Refills on Adherence N/A
Completed NCT01770314 - Study to Test the Efficacy of Online Education to Increase Safe Use of Opioid Medication. Phase 2
Completed NCT01741311 - Secondary HIV Prevention and Adherence Among HIV-infected Drug Users N/A
Recruiting NCT01105104 - An Enhanced Medication Monitoring Program Phase 1
Completed NCT01859273 - Adherence Enhancement for Renal Transplant Patients N/A
Withdrawn NCT01430702 - Feasibility of Using a Telemedicine Medication Delivery Unit for Older Adults N/A
Completed NCT01118208 - Blister Packaging Medication to Increase Treatment Adherence and Clinical Response N/A
Completed NCT00848224 - Improving Adherence to Pharmacological Treatment N/A
Recruiting NCT06034301 - Pill Bottle vs Reminder App N/A