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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02202018

A Cluster Randomized Trial to Assess the Impact of Patient and Provider Education on Use of Home Dialysis

Patient and Provider Education for Patients With Severe Chronic Kidney Disease: Assessing the Impact on Barriers and Use of Home Dialysis

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
55 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Calgary · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Patients with severe kidney failure require dialysis or transplantation to survive. For those in whom a transplant is not an option, there are two main dialysis options: hemodialysis (either incenter or at home) or home peritoneal dialysis. Home-based therapies (peritoneal and home hemodialysis) are under-utilized in many Canadian jurisdictions with the proportion of home-based therapies varying between 10 and 40% across centres. Studies show that the low use of home dialysis is due to a variety of factors, though patient and provider awareness and knowledge of home dialysis are major factors. In this cluster randomized trial, the investigators will determine whether a standardized modality education program directed at patients, in combination with a provider-directed intervention, can increase the use of home dialysis in incident dialysis patients in Canada.

Detailed description

Background: Patients with severe kidney failure require dialysis or transplantation to survive. For those in whom a transplant is not an option, there are two main dialysis options: hemodialysis (either incenter or at home) or home peritoneal dialysis. Home-based therapies (peritoneal and home hemodialysis) are under-utilized in many Canadian jurisdictions with the proportion of home-based therapies varying between 10 and 40% across centres. The use of home dialysis remains lower than expected due to combination of patient, caregiver, provider, and health system barriers. Previous studies have highlighted several potential patient and caregiver barriers to use of home therapies including knowledge, skills, personal circumstances, and social supports. Provider barriers have been reported to include lack of training in peritoneal dialysis, lack (or perceived lack) in skills and knowledge, bias, and possibly inadequate physician reimbursement for home dialysis. The Canadian Kidney Knowledge Translation and Generation Network (CANN-NET), a national network of clinicians, researchers and knowledge users that was established to ensure best practices for patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), recently created dialysis modality educational tools aimed at patients and kidney health care providers. On behalf of CANN-NET, the investigators propose a cluster randomized controlled trial (with clusters consisting of severe CKD clinics) of a knowledge translation (KT) strategy to increase use of home dialysis in patients with end-stage renal disease. Informed by careful survey work, clinics randomized to the knowledge translation intervention will receive patient and provider directed educational tools, including the MATCH D tool, compelling visual aids (infographic, white board animated video, and an educational video on dialysis modality options), audit and feedback, and in-person medical detailing. Control clinics will continue with their usual practice with respect to dialysis modality education. Primary Objective To determine whether a standardized modality education program directed at patients, in combination with provider-directed interventions can increase the use of home dialysis in incident dialysis patients in Canada Study Design: A cluster randomized trial of CKD clinics across Canada comparing the efficacy and safety of a KT intervention aiming to increase use of home dialysis in patients with advanced CKD. The unit of observation will be the patient (i.e., outcomes will be measured at the level of an individual patient), and the unit of randomization will be at the level of the multidisciplinary CKD clinic. Team: The investigative study team includes experts in the clinical epidemiology of CKD and kidney failure, local opinion leaders from every province/region, as well experts in knowledge translation and cluster randomized design. As such, the investigators are well positioned to carry out the proposed study. Research Significance: Home dialysis, in comparison to incenter hemodialysis, is associated with increased patient independence, better clinical outcomes, and lower health care costs. Due to a variety of factors, home dialysis use remains variable across Canada. This study will test the effectiveness of a KT strategy to increase the use of home dialysis.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERActive KT intervention1. Provider \& patient-directed infographics educating patients about home dialysis will be displayed in prominent clinic wall space 2. Educational white board presentations promoting home dialysis 3. Each clinic will receive reports outlining their current use of home dialysis in incident ESRD patients compared with provincial \& national averages 4. A Canadian version of the MATCH D tool will be provided to clinic staff, to help evaluate patient appropriateness for home dialysis. 5. Each clinic will receive an in-person visit from one of the study investigators/collaborators detailing the benefits of home dialysis, and the educational tools being offered to support care within their clinic.

Timeline

Start date
2014-09-01
Primary completion
2017-11-01
Completion
2018-09-01
First posted
2014-07-28
Last updated
2018-10-10

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02202018. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.