Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT04606810

Measuring the Impact of an Innovative Educational Intervention in Inflammatory Arthritis

Measuring the Impact of an Innovative Educational Intervention in Inflammatory Arthritis: a Natural Evolution of the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire (CHU) de Québec's Multidisciplinary Information Session

Status
Terminated
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
112 (actual)
Sponsor
CHU de Quebec-Universite Laval · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Self-management is critical for patients with chronic conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis. Such management requires that patients understand what to do to best manage their condition. This study will use a randomized controlled study design to evaluate the impact of a new educational intervention consisting of an educational digital video disc (DVD) and a self-management support session/teleconference with a multidisciplinary team of health care providers for patients (n=150) with active rheumatoid arthritis (RA) starting on or changing biologic agents. This study aims to test whether this intervention improves behavioural intentions, knowledge, and medication adherence three months post-intervention and whether acquired knowledge is retained six months after the intervention. This project will allow to quantify the impact of the educational intervention on patients' behavioural intentions in practical situations using an existing validated questionnaire called BioSecure. The impact of the educational intervention on disease-specific knowledge and on medication adherence will be evaluated using validated questionnaires.

Detailed description

The primary objective of this study was to determine whether patients with active RA starting or changing biological agents demonstrate better self-care safety skills in practical situations using the BioSecure questionnaire three months after receiving a multidisciplinary educational intervention, as compared to patients who received usual care. The secondary objectives were to assess the impact of the educational intervention on behavioral intentions and beliefs and adherence to RA medications in patients receiving the intervention compared to usual care. Trial design This was a pilot, unblinded, randomized study. Participants in group 1 received the usual care plus the multidisciplinary educational intervention at baseline. Participants in group 2 first received usual care, and after 3 months were offered the intervention. The patients' self-care safety skills was measured using the BioSecure questionnaire, and the behavioral intentions and beliefs with respect to medications was assessed using structured questionnaires at baseline, 3 and 6 months. With the participant authorization, data on RA medication adherence, i.e. biological agents and other non-biologic Disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (nbDMARDs) was obtained for the 3 months preceding enrollment and up to 6 months afterwards using their pharmacy records.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERmultidisciplinary educational interventionAt randomization, participants in arm 1 received the educational DVD with the instruction to review its contents within the next two weeks. Between 2 and 4 weeks after randomization, reinforcement teleconferences were done in small groups of 10 participants maximum per session with every participant who mentioned having watched the DVD. Each participant attended only to one teleconference. Usual care consisted in regular follow-up with the treating rheumatologist and possibility of asking questions of the rheumatology nurse by phone.

Timeline

Start date
2015-10-01
Primary completion
2019-04-30
Completion
2019-10-07
First posted
2020-10-28
Last updated
2020-10-28

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04606810. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.