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Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT05407896

End-Stage Kidney Disease Interactive Decision Aid for the Elderly (myKIDNEY)

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
208 (estimated)
Sponsor
Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Decision aids are highly recommended for decisions when there is no "right" treatment choice. The goal is to help patients choose a treatment that is consistent with their preferences and to minimize decisional conflict and regret. A case where there is no "right" treatment concerns the decision to undergo dialysis or supportive care (i.e., conservative management) for elderly (aged ≥70) patients with end-stage kidney disease. The investigators propose to develop an interactive web-based decision aid and test its effectiveness via a pre-post study design. This research aims to reduce decisional conflict for elderly ESKD patients and caregivers.

Detailed description

For patients aged 75 and above with comorbidities, the benefits of dialysis over kidney supportive care, which focuses on maintaining quality of life as opposed to life extension, are not clear. As there is no clear or "right" treatment choice, treatment decisions should be informed by patient preferences. However, currently in Singapore most patients choose dialysis and express decisional conflict and regret. Decision aids (DAs) together with values clarification methods (VCMs) can help patients choose a treatment that is concordant with their preferences and treatment goals. To help minimize decisional conflict among elderly ESKD patients, the first aim of this proposal is to adapt the current materials the investigators have developed (booklet and video) for elderly ESKD patients in a prior effort (NMRC/HSRG/0080/2017) into an interactive web-based tool called myKIDNEY. It will provide patients with tailored and relevant information based on their age and medical history, and help them identify and express their preferences via an interactive VCM. The second aim of the proposal is to test the benefits of counselling with myKIDNEY to standard renal counselling via a pre-post study design. The primary hypothesis is that patients and caregivers who receive counselling with myKIDNEY will report less decisional conflict compared to those who receive standard counselling. The investigators also hypothesize that fewer patients in the intervention arm will opt for dialysis, which is the more costly and invasive treatment option. If the proposed study shows evidence that the interactive tool improves decision-making quality in the local setting, this will result in a better patient experience. If fewer patients choose dialysis as per our hypothesis, this will also generate cost savings for the health system while at the same time allowing patients to choose their preferred treatment with lower chances of decisional conflict.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERmyKIDNEY decision aidPatients and caregivers will be counselled using myKIDNEY decision aid which includes a video. Patients will be asked to complete a values clarification exercise (VCE). If a caregiver is recruited without their patient, he/she will be asked to complete the VCE on patient's behalf (i.e., surrogate). At the end of VCE, the participant will be given real-time feedback on which treatment might be the best fit for the patient. With the patient's consent, this information will be shared with the treating physician who can then make recommendations based on the patient's preferences.

Timeline

Start date
2021-07-01
Primary completion
2023-06-01
Completion
2023-09-30
First posted
2022-06-07
Last updated
2022-06-07

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Singapore

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05407896. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.