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UnknownNCT03931577

Effectiveness of Improving Diagnostic and Communication Skills on Antibiotic Prescribing Appropriateness in Acute Cough

Effectiveness and Cost-effectiveness of Improving Clinicians' Diagnostic and Communication Skills on Antibiotic Prescribing Appropriateness in Patients With Acute Cough in Primary Care in Catalonia.

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
2,940 (estimated)
Sponsor
Fundacio d'Investigacio en Atencio Primaria Jordi Gol i Gurina · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Despite their marginal benefit, about 60% of uncomplicated acute lower respiratory infections (ALRTI) are currently treated with antibiotics. Several strategies have been developed to reduce inappropriate antibiotic prescribing, with the use of point-of-care C-reactive protein (CRP) testing and the improvement of the communication skills being the most effective interventions, but most of the studies have been carried out outside Mediterranean countries. This study is aimed at evaluating the effect of a disease-focused intervention (CRP) and an illness-focused intervention (improvement of communication skills to optimise doctor-patient consultations and share-decision making with the aid of patient-centred leaflets) on antibiotic prescribing for patients with ALRTIs in Catalan primary care by means of a cluster, randomised, factorial, controlled trial. Primary care centres will be assigned to four trial arms: usual care, use of CRP testing, enhanced communication skills backed up with leaflets, or combined interventions. The main outcome will be antibiotic use within the first 6 weeks and the quality adjusted life years. A pharmacoeconomic analysis of the impact of these interventions will be assessed.

Detailed description

Background: Most antibiotics are prescribed in primary care, and most commonly for acute lower respiratory infections (ALRTI). Despite their marginal benefit, about 60% of these infections are currently treated with antibiotics in Catalonia, Spain. Several strategies have been developed to reduce inappropriate antibiotic prescribing, with the use of C-reactive protein (CRP) rapid testing and the improvement of the communication skills being the most effective interventions. However, most studies have been carried out outside Mediterranean countries. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness and the efficiency of a continuous disease-focused intervention (CRP) and an illness-focused intervention (enhancement of communication skills to optimise doctor-patient consultations and share decision making with the aid of patient-centred leaflets) on antibiotic prescribing in patients with ALRTIs in Catalan primary care centres. Methods/design: A cluster, randomised, factorial, controlled trial aimed at including 20 primary care centres (n=2,940 patients) with patients older than 18 years presenting for a first consultation with ALRTI, therefore with presence of infected acute cough of up to 3 weeks' duration as the predominant symptom. Centres, according to socioeconomic and antibiotic consumption, will be randomly assigned according to hierarchical clustering to any of four trial arms: usual care, CRP testing, enhanced communication skills backed up with patient leaflets, or combined interventions. A cost-effectiveness and cost-utility analysis will be performed from the perspective of public health system. A qualitative study aimed at identifying the expectations and concerns in patients with ALRTIs and the satisfaction of clinicians with the different interventions will also be performed. Clinicians assigned to the interventions will participate in a 2-hour training workshop before the inception of the trial and will receive a monthly intervention-tailored training module during the trial. Clinical effectiveness will be measured by the antibiotic use within the first 6 weeks and the quality adjusted life years and secondary outcomes will be duration of illness and severity of cough measured with a symptom diary, healthcare reconsultations, hospital admissions and complications. National health care perspective will be adopted and the temporal horizon of the analysis will be one year. Health care costs will be considered and expressed in € of the current year of the analysis. Univariate and multivariate sensitivity analysis will be carried out. Discussion: The ISAAC-CAT project aims to improve the management of ALRTIs in primary care through use of two different clinicians' skills to help target antibiotic prescribing only to those most likely to benefit, and thereby reduce the risk of unnecessary exposure to antibiotics leading to adverse effects and/or the development of AMR without having a negative impact on health status, thus benefiting individual patients and society at large. This project will contribute to evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of different strategies for more appropriate antibiotic prescribing that are currently out of the scope of the actual guidelines.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTC-reactive protein rapid testingContinuous (workshop and monthly web-based training) disease-focused intervention with the provision of CRP rapid testing in the primary care practices.
PROCEDURECommunication skill enhancementContinuous (on-site and monthly online training) illness-focused intervention (enhancement of communication skills to optimise doctor-patient consultations and share decision making with the aid of patient-centred leaflets) in the primary care practices.

Timeline

Start date
2019-11-01
Primary completion
2021-02-28
Completion
2021-12-31
First posted
2019-04-30
Last updated
2019-04-30

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Spain

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03931577. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.