Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT05950607

Trial to Reduce Antimicrobial Use in Nursing Home Residents With Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias 2.0

Trial to Reduce Antimicrobial Use In Nursing Home Residents With Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias 2.0 (TRAIN-AD 2.0)

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
750 (estimated)
Sponsor
Hebrew SeniorLife · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
60 Years – 106 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this pragmatic cluster randomized clinical trial is to compare management of suspected infection in nursing home residents with dementia The main questions it aims to answer whether residents with dementia in nursing homes randomized to use a multicomponent intervention to optimize suspected infection management ( versus usual care) use less antibiotics and fewer burdensome interventions.

Detailed description

This 52-month study (8 months preparation; 34 months trial conduct; 10 months data analyses and manuscript preparation)is a parallel cluster ePCT of an intervention to improve infection management for suspected infections among residents with moderate to advanced dementia (N=600; N=300/arm) living in NHs (N=50; N=25/arm). Facilities are members of a provider managed care network, Iowa Health Care Quality Network ('Network'). The intervention will be similar to the original TRAIN-AD program, but adapted for moderate to advanced dementia and rolled out in the Network. At each intervention NH, the intervention will be implemented for 24-months. Control NHs will employ usual care. In all NHs, there will be a 2-month startup period, 12-month resident enrollment period, and 24-months data collection period (Figure 2). Eligible residents with dementia will be identified using the EHR and Minimum DataSet (MDS) and followed up to 12 months. Outcome data will be ascertained from the EHR. Randomization and program roll out will be at the facility level. Analyses at the resident level. Clinical outcomes compared between arms at 12 months will be: 1. Antimicrobial courses/person-year in residents with moderate to advanced dementia (primary outcome) and all residents with dementia (secondary outcome) (Aim 1); and 2. Number of burdensome procedures/person-year used to manage suspected infections among residents with moderate to advanced dementia and those at all stages of dementia including: hospital transfers, urine specimens, chest x-rays, and blood cultures (secondary outcomes) (Aim 2). A process evaluation of implementation will be conducted in the intervention arm based on the RE-AIM framework1 (Aim 3) using quantitative and qualitative data (stakeholder interviews).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALTRAIN AD 2.0The study intervention is a multi-component training program targeting direct care providers and healthcare proxies for NH residents with moderate to advanced dementia intended to improve the management of urinary tract infections (UTIs) and lower respiratory tract infections (LRIs). The components include: A. Provider Orientation: At NH start-up and q2 months providers will be offered orientations sessions involving two 15-minute presentations, one focused on the background and rationale for the program and one focused on describing the program components. B. A case-based on-line course, "Infection Management in Moderate to Advanced Dementia," C. Posters and pocket cards for providers displaying algorithms guiding appropriate antimicrobial initiation for suspected UTIs and LRIs that integrate patient preferences, and D. Proxies of ALL residents in the facility will be sent a booklet related to infection management for persons with moderate to advanced dementia. .

Timeline

Start date
2023-11-13
Primary completion
2026-06-30
Completion
2026-06-30
First posted
2023-07-18
Last updated
2026-01-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05950607. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.