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Impact of the Decrease of Exposure to Hypnosedative Drugs in the Elderly Through the Discontinuation of Hospital-initiated Prescription (HYPAGE)

Primary Purpose

Sleep Disorders

Status
Unknown status
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
France
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Hypnosedative discontinuation
Sponsored by
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional health services research trial for Sleep Disorders

Eligibility Criteria

65 Years - undefined (Older Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients hospitalized in one of the investigation centres
  • Individuals (male and female) aged 65 years and above
  • Patients prescribed an hypnosedative drug during the hospitalization (after the first 48 hours)
  • Patients from whom a non-opposition of participation in the research is obtained
  • Patients with no history of hypnosedative at the admission (and during the first 48 hours of hospitalization)
  • Individuals not suffering from cognitive impairment suggested by a score of less than 24 on the Mini-Mental State Examination
  • Patients returning home at discharge
  • Patients reachable by phone

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients who gave their opposition to participate in the study
  • Patient with physical disability
  • Patients suffering from severe depression with suicide risk or other severe psychopathologic conditions
  • Individuals suffering from cognitive impairment suggested by a score of less than 24 on the Mini-Mental State Examination
  • Patients suffering from metastatic/terminal cancer or undergoing parenteral treatment (cytotoxic or targeted therapy) for cancer or in palliative care program
  • Patients with severe alcohol or drug dependence
  • Patients unable to answer a questionnaire in French
  • Patients unable to undergo the intervention
  • Patients not available by phone at discharge
  • Patients not returning home at discharge

Sites / Locations

  • Assistance Publique Hopitaux de Paris - Hopital Saint AntoineRecruiting

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm Type

Experimental

No Intervention

Arm Label

Intervention

Control

Arm Description

Intervention towards hospital physicians to promote hypnosedative discontinuation in patients initiated during the hospital stay, intervention towards patients and their general practitioners to heighten awareness about the hypnosedative-related risks.

Usual Care

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Number of patients with deterioration of the quality of sleep in the intervention group compared to control at one year after discharge, assessed by the ISI scale
Number of patients with deterioration of the quality of sleep in the intervention group compared to control at 1 month after discharge, assessed by the ISI scale
Number of patients with deterioration of the quality of sleep in the intervention group compared to control at 3 months after discharge, assessed by the ISI scale
Number of patients with deterioration of the quality of sleep in the intervention group compared to control at 6 months after discharge, assessed by the ISI scale

Secondary Outcome Measures

Frequency of falls in the intervention group compared to usual care at 1 year after discharge, assessed by a fall diary
Frequency of falls in the intervention group compared to usual care at 1 month after discharge, assessed by a fall diary
Frequency of falls in the intervention group compared to usual care at 3 months after discharge, assessed by a fall diary
Frequency of falls in the intervention group compared to usual care at 6 months after discharge, assessed by a fall diary

Full Information

First Posted
November 13, 2014
Last Updated
October 7, 2016
Sponsor
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
Collaborators
Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France, Pierre and Marie Curie University
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT02296957
Brief Title
Impact of the Decrease of Exposure to Hypnosedative Drugs in the Elderly Through the Discontinuation of Hospital-initiated Prescription
Acronym
HYPAGE
Official Title
Decrease of Exposure to Hypnosedative Drugs in the Elderly Through the Discontinuation of Hospital-initiated Prescription: Impact on the Quality of Sleep and Fall Frequency
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
October 2016
Overall Recruitment Status
Unknown status
Study Start Date
November 2014 (undefined)
Primary Completion Date
October 2017 (Anticipated)
Study Completion Date
October 2017 (Anticipated)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Sponsor
Name of the Sponsor
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
Collaborators
Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France, Pierre and Marie Curie University

4. Oversight

Data Monitoring Committee
No

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
Brief Summary Context. Sleep disorders complaints are common in elderly and hypnosedative drugs are widely prescribed in community-dwelling elderly. Furthermore, acute hospitalisation may induce sleep disorders and hypnosedative initiation occurs in 14 to 29% of elderly during a hospital stay. These hospital-induced sleep disorders should spontaneously disappear after discharge and, because of their potential impact on falls, hip fractures, psychiatric side effects and induced dependence, hypnosedative drugs should therefore be discontinued at discharge in these naïve-treated patients. Adhesion to this recommendation is poor. Recent and on-going research on this topic mostly concerns adverse effects although these are already substantially documented and evidence-based, while there is a poor interest on developing research on potential strategies susceptible to practically improve the current adhesion to recommendations. Design and objectives. This project proposes multi-component intervention and is directed towards hospital prescribers, patients, and their general practitioner. It aims at discontinuing, at hospital discharge, the hypnosedative treatment that was initiated during hospitalization in naïve-treated elderly (age≥65) patients. The value of the intervention, as compared to usual care management, will be estimated in a multicentre (6 hospitals gathering 8 centres: 5 internal medicine departments, 3 cardiology departments) randomised, cross-over, two-period trial. Two hospitals will gather 2 centres (2x2 centres) and 4 hospitals will gather only 1 centre (4x1 centres). An equilibrated randomization will be applied to the 8 centres, making sure that, in hospitals gathering 2 centres, these 2 centres will apply the same strategy in a given period and that the 2 hospitals will apply alternative strategies. This randomisation is set up to avoid the risk of a potential contamination between the 2 strategies from one centre to the other within the same hospital. As a result, 3 hospitals (including 4 medical departments) will apply the intervention during the first 11-month period, while the 3 others (including 4 medical departments) will apply usual care during this period, as a result of an equilibrated hospitals randomization. During the second 11-month period, each hospital will apply the alternative management. The two periods will be separated by a 1-month wash-out period. In all 240 patients (15 patients / centre) will be enrolled (120 in the intervention group and 120 in the usual care group). Patient follow-up duration will be 12 months after discharge. Patient status in regards with quality of sleep (study primary objective), hypnosedative consumption and frequency of falls (secondary objectives) will be collected by telephone interviews 1, 3, 6 12 months after discharge. Expected results. The results of the study should contribute to guide research and public decisions to practically decrease hypnosedative prescription and consumption, and associated adverse events.
Detailed Description
Context Hypnosedative prescriptions in hospital can be either the continuation of the drug already prescribed before admission or result from an initiation during hospitalization. In the hospitalised population, 36.7% to 62.7% of the patients indeed complain of significant insomnia. Furthermore, it has been clearly established that a number of factors associated with hospitalization such as the effects of illness and new medications, environmental factors including noise and disruption of usual sleeping schedules induce insomnia and a decrease in the quality of sleep. For these reasons, up to 33% to 60% of hospitalised patients are treated with hypnosedatives. Hospital initiation of hypnosedatives was reported in 14% to 29% of the patients who were not taking a hypnosedative before hospitalization. Unfortunately, only a very few studies have been made on the discontinuation of such drugs at hospital discharge, still they showed that the drug was maintained in 20 to 36% of the initiated patients. In the elderly, hypnosedatives provide only a small improvement in the quality of sleep while falls and cognitive disorders are significantly increased. Due to dependence to benzodiazepines, a withdrawal syndrome may occur at discontinuation after a long term treatment. Therefore, the benefit/risk balance of hypnosedative is not in favour of their use in elderly. Moreover, sleep disturbances appearing during an acute hospital stay are most of the time transient and the continuation should be systematically debated. However, to our best knowledge, no data has yet reported the evaluation of an intervention aiming at discontinuing the prescription at discharge from hospital in formerly hypnosedative-naïve patients. Design The HYPAGE study is a multicentre, cluster-randomized, two-period cross-over study that will test an intervention (compared to usual care) for discontinuing hypnosedative prescription at the time of hospital discharge in patients aged 65 years and over. Six hospitals gathering 8 centres (5 internal medicine departments, 3 cardiology departments) located in the Paris area will participate in the study. Two hospitals will gather 2 centres (2x2 centres) and 4 hospitals will gather only 1 centre (4x1 centres). An equilibrated randomization will be applied to the 8 centres, making sure that, in hospitals gathering 2 centres, these 2 centres will apply the same strategy in a given period and that the 2 hospitals will apply alternative strategies. This randomisation is set up to avoid the risk of a potential contamination between the 2 strategies from one centre to the other within the same hospital. As a result, 3 hospitals (including 4 medical departments) will apply the intervention during the first 11-month period, while the 3 others (including 4 medical departments) will apply usual care during this period, as a result of an equilibrated hospitals randomization. During the second 11-month period, each hospital will apply the alternative management. The two periods will be separated by a 1-month wash-out period. Description of the intervention. The intervention under study includes two components involving a local hospital pharmacist, the first component towards physicians, and the second towards patients. The intervention towards physicians is composed of the following items: A written and oral information will be delivered to the hospital physicians. Such information includes: Place of hypnosedatives among drugs at risk in elderly Adverse drug events induced by hypnosedatives: prevalence of falls in elderly, psychiatric adverse events. Procedures of hypnosedative withdrawal (French recommendations, HAS 2007) The oral presentation will be presented during a staff meeting to the physicians in every centre entering the study at the beginning of the intervention period. The oral presentation will be delivered by local pharmacist in all centres entering the trial, according to the standardized slide show (i.e. slides + accompanying talk) prepared by the scientific committee of the study. In patient in whom a hypnosedative has been initiated, medication reconciliation at discharge will involve the local hospital pharmacist. Medication reconciliation refers to the process of reviewing the patient's complete medication regimen at the time of admission, transfer, and discharge and comparing it with the regimen being considered for the new setting of care. The pharmacist will compare the medication list during the hospital stay with the discharge prescription. If the hypnosedative is maintained at discharge, after discussion with the physician on the opportunity of the hypnosedative continuation, two alternative decisions may be chosen: If the physician decides to maintain the hypnosedative drug, the reason will be registered If the physician decides to stop the hypnosedative, a standardized text will be included in the usual letter transmitted to the patient's general practitioner after hospital discharge. It will indicate that the hypnosedative initiated in patient during hospitalization was stopped at discharge (or progressively decreased with the aim of discontinuation), and will briefly mention the adverse effects related to continuation of hypnosedative use, advocating that any reintroduction should be based on sound arguments. Therefore, the intervention includes a component oriented towards the continuity of care after discharge, this component being directed towards general practitioners. Intervention towards patients Intervention towards patients consists in the delivery of a written information. The written information and the accompanying talk of the pharmacist during this delivery both heighten awareness about the hypnosedative-related risks of adverse drug events: relation between hypnosedatives and falls, uselessness of hypnosedatives at home after hospital discharge. Patient follow-up Patients will be included the day of discharge and will be followed-up up to 12 months. A study pharmacist will be enrolled and will be in charge for collecting follow-up data of all patients, whatever their admission centre. The study pharmacist will call (phone calls) the patient or the surrogate, the general practitioner and the community pharmacist 1, 3, 6, and 12 months after hospital discharge. He will assess the current treatment and will collect data concerning: The quality of sleep (Insomnia Severity Index score) The current hypnosedative treatment Frequency of falls will be assessed by a fall diary. This fall diary will be provided to the patient at discharge and will be filled by the patient. The diary will be sent to the study pharmacist on a monthly basis (envelopes and stamps will be provided at hospital discharge). Objectives The primary objective of the study is to assess if the intervention does not produce a deterioration of the quality of sleep quality (non-inferiority design) compared to usual care. The primary criterion will be the quality of sleep in the patients 1, 3, 6, and 12 months after hospital discharge. The Insomnia Severity Index score should not differ by more than The secondary objectives are the following: Comparing the frequency of falls in the intervention and usual care groups. Measuring the frequency of hypnosedative reintroduction 1, 3, 6 and 12 months after discharge when hypnosedative prescription is stopped at hospital discharge. Comparing the Insomnia Severity Index score in treated and untreated patients with an hypnosedative drug at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months. Comparing the frequency of falls in treated versus untreated patients with an hypnosedative drug at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months. Sample size There is no formula for non inferiority design in cluster cross-over trials, therefore we chose to calculate the sample size for a traditional parallel group design and have applied the design effect linked with the clustering in centres and over periods. The calculation is based on the following hypotheses: a mean ISI score in patients treated with hypnosedative medications of 8 and a standard deviation of 5, a non inferiority limit of 3, a power of 90% and a one-sided type I error of 0.025. The sample size for a non inferiority trial without accounting for intra-cluster and interperiod correlations, is 63 per arms, i.e. 126 patients in total. With a hypothesized intracluster correlation of 0.03 and an interperiod correlation of 0.01 (NB: in cross-over clustered trials, it is widely accepted that the intracluster correlation should be at least twice the interperiod correlation, and these values should be low), the design effect is 1.29 [36]. The resulting calculated sample size is 162, rounded to 180 in order to take into account the patients lost to follow up. Based on the participation of 6 centres (original number of centres), this results in 15 patients per period and per centre. We kept this number of 15 patients per period per centre after the addition of 2 centres (8 including centres) in order to achieve at least the same power. This leads to 240 patients in all. With regards to the average length of stay and the number of beds, we estimate that such a number of patients can be enrolled during one semester in each center (worst case calculation). Statistics Results on quantitative variables will be provided as means and standard deviations or median and interquartile, results on qualitative variables will be provided as numbers and percentages. A type I error is set at 0.05. To account for clustering and the cross-over matching, the comparison between groups will be made using Mantel-Haenszel and Wilcoxon signed rank tests. Confidence intervals will be calculated using resampling bootstrap methods. Analysis set. The primary analysis will be conducted according to the intent-to-treat principle (ITT), at the individual level, considering every patient included irrespective of the patient's follow-up and will take into account the clustering nature of data. Due to the non-inferiority design, secondary sensitivity analyses in the per-protocol population will also be conducted. Missing values in the ITT analysis: we will check whether the proportion of missing values does not differ from one arm to the other. For patients with a missing endpoint we will assume there was no modification of the quality of sleep after discharge (i.e. a variation of the ISI score of 0). More conservative sensitivity analyses will be conducted, with an imputed increase of the ISI score above 3 (non inferiority limit) in the intervention arm vs imputed increase of the ISI score of 0 in the control arm. Methods for Main endpoint analysis. The analysis will be performed at the individual level. A comparison will be made of the mean ISI score for the two arms. We will use a linear mixed effect model to perform the comparison, in which the fixed effects are: the period, the arm, the cluster, and the random effects are: the order of strategies and individual residual error. The conclusion of non inferiority will be based by the confrontation of the lower limit of the confidence interval and the pre-specified non inferiority limit (3 points). Methods for Secondary endpoint analyses. The analysis of secondary endpoints will be performed using the same methodological framework taking into account the clustering and the period effect. For binomial variables, alternating logistic regression models will be used.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Sleep Disorders

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Health Services Research
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Crossover Assignment
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
240 (Anticipated)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Intervention
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Intervention towards hospital physicians to promote hypnosedative discontinuation in patients initiated during the hospital stay, intervention towards patients and their general practitioners to heighten awareness about the hypnosedative-related risks.
Arm Title
Control
Arm Type
No Intervention
Arm Description
Usual Care
Intervention Type
Procedure
Intervention Name(s)
Hypnosedative discontinuation
Intervention Description
Intervention towards hospital physicians to promote hypnosedative discontinuation in patients initiated during the hospital stay, intervention towards patients and their general practitioners to heighten awareness about the hypnosedative-related risks.
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Number of patients with deterioration of the quality of sleep in the intervention group compared to control at one year after discharge, assessed by the ISI scale
Time Frame
12 months after discharge
Title
Number of patients with deterioration of the quality of sleep in the intervention group compared to control at 1 month after discharge, assessed by the ISI scale
Time Frame
1 month after discharge
Title
Number of patients with deterioration of the quality of sleep in the intervention group compared to control at 3 months after discharge, assessed by the ISI scale
Time Frame
3 months after discharge
Title
Number of patients with deterioration of the quality of sleep in the intervention group compared to control at 6 months after discharge, assessed by the ISI scale
Time Frame
6 months after discharge
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Frequency of falls in the intervention group compared to usual care at 1 year after discharge, assessed by a fall diary
Time Frame
12 months after discharge
Title
Frequency of falls in the intervention group compared to usual care at 1 month after discharge, assessed by a fall diary
Time Frame
1 month after discharge
Title
Frequency of falls in the intervention group compared to usual care at 3 months after discharge, assessed by a fall diary
Time Frame
3 months after discharge
Title
Frequency of falls in the intervention group compared to usual care at 6 months after discharge, assessed by a fall diary
Time Frame
6 months after discharge

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
65 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion criteria Patients hospitalized in one of the investigation centres Individuals (male and female) aged 65 years and above Patients prescribed an hypnosedative drug during the hospitalization (after the first 48 hours) Patients from whom a non-opposition of participation in the research is obtained Patients with no history of hypnosedative at the admission (and during the first 48 hours of hospitalization) Individuals not suffering from cognitive impairment suggested by a score of less than 24 on the Mini-Mental State Examination Patients returning home at discharge Patients reachable by phone Exclusion criteria Patients who gave their opposition to participate in the study Patient with physical disability Patients suffering from severe depression with suicide risk or other severe psychopathologic conditions Individuals suffering from cognitive impairment suggested by a score of less than 24 on the Mini-Mental State Examination Patients suffering from metastatic/terminal cancer or undergoing parenteral treatment (cytotoxic or targeted therapy) for cancer or in palliative care program Patients with severe alcohol or drug dependence Patients unable to answer a questionnaire in French Patients unable to undergo the intervention Patients not available by phone at discharge Patients not returning home at discharge
Central Contact Person:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
Christine Fernandez, PharmD, PhD
Phone
(33-1) 49 28 21 66
Email
christine.fernandez@sat.aphp.fr
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
Patrick Hindlet, PharmD, PhD
Phone
(33-1) 49 28 30 34
Email
Patrick.hindlet@sat.aphp.fr
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Christine Fernandez, PharmD, PhD
Organizational Affiliation
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Assistance Publique Hopitaux de Paris - Hopital Saint Antoine
City
Paris
ZIP/Postal Code
75012
Country
France
Individual Site Status
Recruiting

12. IPD Sharing Statement

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Impact of the Decrease of Exposure to Hypnosedative Drugs in the Elderly Through the Discontinuation of Hospital-initiated Prescription

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