Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Active Not Recruiting

Active Not RecruitingNCT04527926

STEPuP: Prenatal Provider Education and Training to Improve Medication-assisted Treatment Use During Pregnancy

Project STEPuP: A Prenatal Provider Education and Training Program to Improve Medication-assisted Treatment Use During Pregnancy and Maternal and Child Health Outcomes

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,000 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Pittsburgh · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This research will test the effectiveness of a prenatal provider education and training program designed to facilitate provider adoption of evidence-based practices for the treatment of OUD during pregnancy. Findings from this research will provide high quality evidence about how to increase evidence-based treatment for pregnant women with OUD and subsequent maternal-child health outcomes.

Detailed description

The prevalence of opioid use disorder (OUD) during pregnancy has quadrupled over the past decade, as have maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality related to substance use. Medication assisted treatment (MAT) use during pregnancy reduces adverse outcomes and is the recommended, evidence-based practice (EBP) for OUD treatment during pregnancy. Despite this, 40% of pregnant women with OUD do not receive MAT. Currently, there are no effective strategies to expand MAT access and availability for pregnant women, especially in rural, low-resource settings where maternal opioid use is disproportionately high. As an initial step to address this gap, the investigators engaged key stakeholders across a large health system in Pennsylvania to determine barriers and facilitators to expanding treatment services in high need, low-resource obstetric settings. The stakeholders identified a critical need for a women-centered, low resource, sustainable, provider-level intervention to facilitate the adoption of MAT in obstetric settings. Therefore, the investigators objective is to test the effectiveness of a prenatal provider education and training program designed to facilitate the adoption of EBP for OUD during pregnancy called Project STEPuP (Substance abuse Treatment and Education during pregnancy and Postpartum). Project STEPuP, grounded in preliminary and pilot work conducted by the research team, has 4 components designed to address barriers to MAT and EBP adoption: 1) a "hub and spoke," remotely supported provider education and training program, 2) addiction teleconsultation support, 3) case management and telepsychiatry support, and 4) a partnership with health system administrators and payers to address administrative and reimbursement related needs. To achieve this objective, the research team will conduct a cluster-randomized clinical trial across 12 obstetric sites in Pennsylvania and New York. Outcomes among 870 patients will be assessed during pregnancy, at delivery and through 1 year postpartum. The investigators central hypothesis is that Project STEPuP will facilitate EBP adoption, increase MAT utilization and improve health outcomes among pregnant and postpartum women with OUD and their children. Specifically, the investigators aim to: 1) Create organizational readiness to facilitate Project STEPuP implementation; 2) Assess the effect of Project STEPuP on provider adoption of EBP for OUD during pregnancy; and 3) Evaluate the effect of provider adoption of EBP on maternal and child health outcomes. The investigators research is significant by addressing the substantial knowledge gap of how to increase MAT use in pregnancy and innovative by examining the role that prenatal providers can play in expanding treatment access. Study outcome measures refined in January 2024 to align with grant proposal and increase readability.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALSTEPuP InterventionProject STEPup has 4 components designed to address barriers to MAT and EBP adoption: 1) a "hub and spoke" remotely-supported provider education and training program, 2) addiction teleconsultation support, 3) case management and telepsychiatry support, and 4) a partnership with health system administrators and payers to address administrative and reimbursement related needs.
BEHAVIORALUsual CareStandard of Care

Timeline

Start date
2020-09-30
Primary completion
2026-04-30
Completion
2026-04-30
First posted
2020-08-27
Last updated
2025-10-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04527926. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.