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Active Not RecruitingNCT06119464

Re-Purposing the Ordering of 'Routine' Laboratory Tests in Hospitalized Medical Patients (RePORT Study)

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
251,817 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Calgary · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Laboratory test overuse occurs when tests are ordered repetitively, without due consideration of impact on clinical status. Repetitive inpatient lab testing often provides limited value for patient outcomes while increasing healthcare costs, patient discomfort, and unnecessary transfusions and prolonging hospitalizations. The research study aims to reduce laboratory test overuse in hospitals through implementation of a comprehensive, multi-disciplinary, and multi-faceted intervention bundle that includes audit and feedback reports, clinician education, clinical decision support tool, and patient infographics across 14 hospitals in Alberta.

Detailed description

Background: Laboratory and Pathology testing contributes to rising health care expenditure. A relatively large percentage (up to 42%) of laboratory testing can be considered wasteful. Redundant testing alone has been estimated to waste up to 5 billion dollars annually in the United States of America. Laboratory over-utilization leads to false positives that promotes further inappropriate testing and procedures, interruption of normal sleep pattern of inpatients, as well as iatrogenic anemia and pain. A Canadian study showed significant hemoglobin reductions as a result of phlebotomy. Studies support the safe reduction of repetitive laboratory testing without negative effects on adverse events, readmission rates, critical care utilization, or mortality. The aim of this research study is the following: 1. To implement a multimodal intervention bundle containing healthcare provider and patient engagement tools for hospitalized medical inpatients in 14 hospitals across the province of Alberta in Canada using a cluster randomized stepped-wedge design 2. To evaluate the impact of the intervention bundle on laboratory test utilization of six target laboratory tests (complete blood count, electrolytes, creatinine, urea, partial thromboplastin time, and international normalized ratio), costs, and patient safety outcomes. This intervention bundle will be implemented across all the adult hospital sites in Alberta starting January 2023 and evaluated until October 2024.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERMultimodal Intervention: EducationThe multimodal intervention bundle consists of education, audit and feedback, patient engagement, and system changes.
OTHERMultimodal Intervention: Audit and FeedbackThe multimodal intervention bundle consists of education, audit and feedback, patient engagement, and system changes.
OTHERMultimodal Intervention: Patient EngagementThe multimodal intervention bundle consists of education, audit and feedback, patient engagement, and system changes.
OTHERMultimodal Intervention: System ChangesThe multimodal intervention bundle consists of education, audit and feedback, patient engagement, and system changes.

Timeline

Start date
2023-01-02
Primary completion
2024-10-31
Completion
2025-10-01
First posted
2023-11-07
Last updated
2024-12-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06119464. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.