Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT06068491

Veteran-Centered Care for Advanced Liver Disease (Vet-CALD)

Integrating Veteran-Centered Care for Advanced Liver Disease (I-VCALD)

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
450 (estimated)
Sponsor
VA Office of Research and Development · Federal
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Advanced liver disease is a serious illness that disproportionately affects Veterans, many of whom hope for curative liver transplantation. However, too few receive a transplant and most continue to suffer from increasing symptoms and hospitalizations. The proposed project uses a whole person, Veteran-centered approach that identifies Veterans with advanced liver disease using a population-based health management system and integrates curative and early supportive care using a telemedicine-based nurse care counselor to (1) discuss patient's understanding of illness severity and prognosis, (2) identify priorities and care preferences and (3) align curative and supportive care options to achieve patient priorities. Study outcomes include changes in (1) rates of consideration for liver transplantation, and (2) completion of serious illness discussions. Findings will inform adaptations to the intervention and facilitators for its dissemination.

Detailed description

Project Background and Rationale: Advanced liver disease (AdvLD) is a serious illness. As many as half of AdvLD patients die within 2 years of developing liver complications, and nearly all suffer increasing symptoms and hospitalizations. Although many patients hope for curative liver transplantation, few receive it while experiencing an increasingly severe illness. In previous studies, many patients with AdvLD reported unmet curative and supportive care needs. They also reported preferences to align care with their outcome goals earlier in the AdvLD course than is now common. The Vet-CALD program is a Whole Health program in AdvLD that focuses on what matters most to patients, shared goals, and goal-aligned treatments, and could improve both curative and supportive care. Project Objectives: The overall goal of the Vet-CALD project is to develop and test a novel sustainable Whole Health program in caring for patients with AdvLD. Using a hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation study design, the project will: (Aim 1) conduct a formative assessment of Vet-CALD implementation for Veterans with AdvLD; (Aim 2) evaluate the effectiveness of Vet-CALD in a randomized controlled study at 8 VA centers; and (Aim 3) conduct a summative assessment of implementation outcomes. Project Methods: In Aim 1, the study team will conduct in-depth qualitative interviews with clinical stakeholders and patients to identify steps necessary to refine the Vet-CALD intervention, develop engagement processes for patients, and establish integrated workflows at the four targeted VA sites. In Aim 2 the study team will conduct a randomized clinical trial (N=450) with patients from 8 VA medical centers assigned (1:1) to Usual Care vs. Vet-CALD Intervention. The Vet-CALD intervention will consist of a centralized research care counselor who will work with individual patients by telehealth (3 to 5 visits over 6 months) to assess and cultivate their understanding of their illness and identify personal healthcare goals. The counselor will be part of a centralized care team (hepatologist and supportive care physician) and will work with each patient's usual providers to help tailor treatment plans and education to better align with each patient's understanding of their disease prognosis and their healthcare goals and priorities. In Aim 3, Summative assessment will provide context for the effectiveness results and inform necessary adaptations to and dissemination of Vet-CALD.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERVet-CALDVet-CALD Participants will receive the standard of care from their usual VA healthcare provider, plus they will participate in 5 monthly 60-minute care counselor sessions over a period of 6 months via VA Video Connect (VVC) or by telephone. The purpose of care counselor visits is to assess and cultivate the patient's understanding of their illness and identify personal healthcare goals. The counselor will be part of a centralized research care team (hepatologist and supportive care physician) and will work with each patient's usual VA care providers to help tailor treatment plans and education to better align with each patient's understanding of their disease prognosis and their healthcare goals and priorities.

Timeline

Start date
2024-10-01
Primary completion
2026-09-30
Completion
2027-09-30
First posted
2023-10-05
Last updated
2026-02-06

Locations

8 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06068491. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.