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Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT06671886

NAFLD Clinical Care Pathway

Testing the Effectiveness of NAFLD Clinical Care Pathway in VA Primary Care

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
32 (estimated)
Sponsor
VA Office of Research and Development · Federal
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a new condition that has become the most common chronic liver disease in the world and a main cause of liver cirrhosis, liver failure and liver cancer. Obesity and diabetes, conditions that are very common among Veterans are the main risk factors for NAFLD. Therefore, the burden of NAFLD and its complications among Veterans is substantial. However, most VA patients with NAFLD are undiagnosed and untreated, and their care is not consistent with practice guidelines. The NAFLD Clinical Care Pathway (NCCP) intervention seeks to close this major gap in the care of Veterans by automatically identifying patients at risk of NAFLD, calculating their risk scores of having severe NAFLD, and educating the primary care providers on the diagnosis and treatment of NAFLD. This clinical trial will test the benefit of this NCCP intervention against usual care in increasing the rates of NAFLD diagnosis as well as referral to and enrollment in appropriate treatment. The study will also identify barriers and promotors of future NCCP implementation.

Detailed description

Background: In the United States, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) affects 25-30% of adults and has become a leading cause of chronic liver disease including cirrhosis and liver cancer. The burden of NAFLD and its complications among patients in the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is increasing. Most complications occur among patients with advanced hepatic fibrosis. Treatment (e.g., weight loss) improves patients' outcomes. Significance: The investigator's data indicate that most VA patients with NAFLD are undiagnosed and untreated. There is an urgent need to address this major gap in care. Most people with NAFLD are seen in primary care settings. The NAFLD Clinical Care Pathway (NCCP) is a multistep, algorithmic process that entails identification of patients at risk through an e-trigger (Step 1), targeted history and lab testing (Step 2), noninvasive testing for hepatic fibrosis using FIB-4 (Step 3), elective additional fibrosis testing with Fibroscan for those with indeterminate FIB-4 (Step 4), and subsequent recommended management. The NCCP has face and content validity based on consensus of multiple stakeholders including VA clinicians, and high efficacy in the investigator's preliminary data. The investigators propose to adapt the multicomponent NCCP intervention for use in VA primary care and prospectively test its effectiveness for identification and severity stratification of patients with NAFLD. The investigator's approach is consistent with VA strategic priorities to implement a more "Veteran-centered" approach that improves access to care. Innovation \& Impact: This is the first study to examine the effectiveness of any NAFLD clinical care pathway in a VA primary care practice. The design is a cluster-randomized controlled trial with randomization at the level of Patient Aligned Care Teams (PACTs) in primary care, and a state-of-the-art technique to diagnose NAFLD and stage the severity of hepatic fibrosis. The investigator's formative and summative evaluation will provide key information about the feasibility, acceptability and determinants of implementation. The NCCP intervention is a paradigm shift in NAFLD care from haphazard and sporadic care into a systematic, equitable, and evidence-based approach. Specific Aims: Aim 1. Conduct a formative evaluation to assess feasibility and acceptability of the NCCP among patients and providers; adapt the NCCP for prospective testing based on feedback. Aim 2. Examine the effectiveness of the NCCP intervention compared to usual care in improving NAFLD care processes and patient outcomes. Aim 3. Conduct a summative evaluation to identify patient and provider characteristics associated with effectiveness of NCCP and to assess future implementation. The investigator's hypothesis is that NCCP when adapted to Patient Aligned Care Teams (PACTs) in VA primary care considerably increases the identification of patients with NAFLD and those with high-risk NAFLD, and results in an increase in guideline-concordant management. Methodology: The study will be conducted in primary care settings in a single large VA Medical Center. The investigators will conduct patient interviews and focus groups with PACTs to inform adaption of the NCCP. The investigators will then conduct a cluster-randomized trial of 16 PACTs in primary care to compare the effectiveness of NCCP to usual care in improving NAFLD care, with PACTs as unit of randomization and patients as the unit of analysis. The multicomponent intervention includes an e-trigger to identify patients eligible for NAFLD screening and calculate fibrosis scores, a structured provider education on NAFLD management and treatment recommendations, and coordination by an inter-professional team. The primary outcome will be a composite binary variable consisting of NAFLD diagnosis and risk stratification. Secondary outcomes include referral to a weight loss program, referral of patients with advanced fibrosis to hepatology specialty care, and enrollment among those referred to weight loss and hepatology specialty care. Summative evaluation will inform future implementation. Next Steps/Implementation: The investigators study will provide information needed to support future projects to implement the NCCP in VA primary care settings. The study will also lay the foundation for a subsequent project to examine the adopted intervention's effect on weight loss and NAFLD biomarkers in patients with high-risk NAFLD.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALE-triggerThe NCCP Intervention is multicomponent. First, the investigators will apply the e-trigger and calculate FIB-4, and second, will educate and train PACT personnel on how to deal with trigger positive patients as well as make treatment recommendations within an inter-professional team. The e-trigger will be generated every 3 months. The effectiveness of the trigger will be assessed using the outcomes previously mentioned.

Timeline

Start date
2024-02-02
Primary completion
2028-01-31
Completion
2028-11-13
First posted
2024-11-04
Last updated
2025-11-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06671886. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.