Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The use of packaging interventions like pillboxes or blister packs has been shown to significantly improve medication adherence. The purpose of this study is to assess the effect of home-delivered pill packs on medication adherence in a low-income population. This is an open-lab randomized controlled trial taking four or more medication doses daily, randomized either to the intervention group or the control group. Patients in the intervention group received prescriptions pre-packaged in individual packets that were delivered by the pharmacy. Patients in the control group continued to receive medications from pharmacies as they did prior to enrollment. The primary outcome was the percentage of missed pills in the intervention group versus the control group after four months of enrollment.


Clinical Trial Description

For patients in the study group, new prescriptions with three refills were electronically scripted to local compliance packaging pharmacy, ExactCare pharmacy, LLC, Valley View, Ohio, 44125. ExactCare is a local packaging pharmacy that pre-packs medications for patients so that each day's medications come in a separate paper compartment that can be discarded after daily use. They also deliver medications to the patients' homes. At the initiation of the study, ExactCare provided medications in pill packs for all patient medications in a 30-day supply (Figure 2). Pill bottle medications were provided for medications that would run out prior to the initial supply date. Inhalers, nebulizers, injectable medications, as needed medications and medications that required frequent dose changes were not included in the pill packs but were sent separately within the 30-day supply box. If the patient was started on a new medication by their PCP, the local compliance packaging pharmacy packed this medication in pill packs for the next 30-day box supply and sent pill bottles containing enough pills to last the patient till the next 30-day box. Every pill in the pill pack was coded with an identification number. If the patient's physician discontinued or changed the dose of any medication, the patient was advised to remove the pill from the pack using its identification number and either discard it or make the dose change accordingly. A study investigator counted the pills left in the control group prior to the study start date. After the study start date, patients in the control group continued to receive their medications the same way they were getting them before being enrolled in this study using either electronic or printed prescriptions. They received instructions about the timing and frequency of medication administration from their physicians and nurses, and picked up their medications from their local pharmacy. Patients from both groups had a follow-up PCP visit approximately four months from enrollment. Patients received telephone calls prior to their follow-up appointments to remind them to bring their medications from home. During the appointment, the study investigator counted the medications remaining in the pill packs for the study group patients and the pills remaining in pill bottles for the control group patients. ExactCare provided the initial start date for each patient receiving their pill packs in 30-day supply. Refill dates were accessed from local pharmacies and the EMR for patients in the control group. This information was used to calculate the number of pills expected to remain with each patient at the end of the study and to compare to the actual number of pills remaining. New medications, discontinued medications, and modified-dose medications were not included in the study analysis. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04236817
Study type Interventional
Source The Cleveland Clinic
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date January 1, 2015
Completion date May 30, 2015

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
Completed NCT06034301 - Pill Bottle vs Reminder App N/A