Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This study is being done to find out if a multi-faceted intervention designed to optimize medication in hospitalized older people with multiple chronic medical conditions exposed to multiple medications can reduce unplanned hospital readmission and emergency department attendance compared to current usual medication management. The study intervention aims to minimize potentially inappropriate medications in a structured way and involves follow up with patients and GPs. Patients will be allocated equally to (i) standard medication management (control arm) or (ii) trained physician-delivered intervention or (iii) clinical pharmacist-delivered intervention.


Clinical Trial Description

Background: Recurrent hospitalization and unplanned emergency department (ED) attendance resulting from potentially inappropriate medication is an increasingly common phenomenon in older people with multi-morbidity and associated polypharmacy. With a growing older population with multi-morbidity/polypharmacy, there is a pressing need to address the increasing challenge of potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) and potential prescribing omissions (PPOs) and associated problems that accentuate adverse drug reactions/events and avoidable excess morbidity. There is also an imperative to curb excess healthcare expenditure related to preventable medication-related problems. Objective: To test the clinical and economic impact of a multi-faceted medication optimization definitive intervention on avoidable rehospitalization and unscheduled ED attendance in multi-morbid patients aged ≥ 70 years hospitalized with acute illness.To test the clinical and economic impact of a multi-faceted medication optimization definitive intervention (DI) on avoidable rehospitalization and unscheduled ED attendance in multi-morbid patients aged ≥ 70 years hospitalized with acute illness. Design: A randomized controlled clinical trial is proposed in which it is anticipated to randomize 3 x 463 patients to one of 3 groups: (a) standard pharmaceutical care, or (b) trained physician-implemented DI, or (c) clinical pharmacist-implemented DI. Setting: Acute care environment in 3 large tertiary referral teaching hospitals with similar custom and practice relating to management of older people with acute illness. Participants: Patients aged ≥ 70 years with multi-morbid illness i.e. ≥ 3 chronic medical conditions and associated polypharmacy i.e. ≥ 5 daily prescription medications admitted with acute unselected illness. Intervention: The definitive multi-faceted intervention will consist of the following components:modified structured history of medication (SHiM), Screening Tool of Older Persons' Prescriptions (STOPP) and Screening Tool to Alert to Right Treatment (START) screening for PIMs and PPOs using STOPP/START version 3.0, drug-drug interaction screening using Stockley's Drug Interaction Checker, face-to-face consultation with attending hospital physicians to discuss PIMs, PPOs, interactions and other issues, pre-discharge medication review and adjustment, detailed medication adjustment discharge report to patients' general practitioners (GPs), post-discharge follow-up contact with patients' GPs and community pharmacists at 1 week and 1 and 3-6 months post-discharge. Study Population: OPTIMATE will focus on patients admitted with acute medical or surgical illness to Cork University Hospital, University Hospital Waterford and Ghent University Hospital. Patients to be screened for enrolment are those admitted primarily under the care of specialist departments other than geriatric medicine. Data Collection: All OPTIMATE trial data will be collected electronically and entered on a bespoke trial proforma. Once verified as fully correct and complete, all individual participant trial data will be stored on a fully secure clinical trial database. Statistical Analysis: Treatment effects for each of the two active intervention arms (versus control) in terms of binary outcomes (e.g. readmission) will be estimated using logistic regression, while Health Related QoL (EQ-5D 5L) will be analyzed using ordinal regression with a logit link function (i.e. a proportional odds model). We will report two models for each outcome: one adjusted for centre and admitting service type; and another further adjusted for centre, age (years), sex, number of comorbidities at baseline, and number of prescribed medications at baseline. Effect estimates will be reported as odds-ratios with 95% confidence intervals and exact p-values. There will be no correction for multiplicity, but we will report results for all outcomes regardless of the result and provide enough information for the reader to make whatever corrections they may consider appropriate. Equivalence tests comparing the two active arms (for each outcome) will be done using a "two one-sided tests" procedure based on a 90% confidence interval (which equates to a 5% type 1 error rate). All analyses will be conducted on an intention-to-treat basis and will be conducted under the quality system and SOPs of the HRB CRF-C Statistics and Data Analysis Unit. A complete statistical analysis plan (SAP) will be pre-registered on the Open Science Framework prior to patient recruitment database lock. Any necessary deviations from this SAP will be documented and explained in the trial report. There will be only one single trial data analysis at the end of the project. All reporting will be carried out in accordance with CONSORT guidelines for clinical trials. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05387096
Study type Interventional
Source University College Cork
Contact Denis O'Mahony, Professor
Phone 00 353 21 4922396
Email denis.omahony@ucc.ie
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date January 17, 2023
Completion date September 30, 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03688542 - Opportunities and Limits to Deprescribing in Nursing Homes:Quality Circle Deprescribing Module N/A
Completed NCT02545257 - Development of a Coordinated, Community-Based Medication Management Model for Home-Dwelling Aged in Primary Care N/A
Withdrawn NCT01932632 - Medication Minimization for Long-term Care Residents N/A
Recruiting NCT04615065 - Acutelines: a Large Data-/Biobank of Acute and Emergency Medicine
Active, not recruiting NCT04181879 - Appropriate Polypharmacy in Older People in Primary Care N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03283735 - Deprescribing: a Portrait and Out-comes of the Reduction of Polypharmacy in Portugal N/A
Completed NCT02918058 - Reducing Post-discharge Potentially Inappropriate Medications Among Older Adults N/A
Completed NCT03655405 - Randomised, Controlled Trial of an Individual Deprescribing Intervention for Nursing Homes Residents N/A
Completed NCT04575155 - Development & Pilot of the Technology-Enabled Alliance for Medication Therapy Management N/A
Withdrawn NCT05816967 - Rationalisation of Polypharmacy by the RASP-instrument and Discharge Counselling of Geriatric Inpatients N/A
Completed NCT05616689 - Bundled Hyperpolypharmacy Deprescribing N/A
Terminated NCT04055896 - Team Approach to Polypharmacy Evaluation and Reduction in a Long-Term Care Setting N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03052192 - Biological Aging, Medication, Malnutrition and Inflammation Among Acutely Ill and Healthy Elderly.
Completed NCT02866799 - Multi-PAP: Improving Prescription in Primary Care Patients With Multimorbidity and Polypharmacy N/A
Completed NCT01732302 - Educational Intervention to Reduce Drug-related Hospitalizations in Elderly Primary Health Care Patients N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT05053815 - Pharmacogenomic Testing in a Program of All-inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE) Setting
Active, not recruiting NCT04585191 - Reducing Treatment Risk in Older Adults With Diabetes N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04120480 - Effectiveness of PGx Testing N/A
Recruiting NCT05609981 - Optimising Medication With Focus on Deprescribing in Frail Older People With Multidose Drug Dispensing Systems N/A
Recruiting NCT05501223 - Physician-initiated Medication Review in a Type 2 Diabetes Outpatient Clinic N/A