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Reducing Post-discharge Adverse Drug Events Amongst the Elderly: a Multi-centre Electronic Deprescribing Intervention

Primary Purpose

Adverse Drug Event

Status
Completed
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
Canada
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Deprescribing opportunities
Sponsored by
McGill University Health Centre/Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional supportive care trial for Adverse Drug Event focused on measuring Adverse Drug Event, Choosing Wisely Canada, Deprescribing, Elderly, Frailty, High value healthcare, Medication rationalization, Medication stewardship, Polypharmacy

Eligibility Criteria

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

Inclusion Criteria:

  • patients aged 65 years and older
  • patients who take five or more medications in the community
  • patients who are cognitively impaired or otherwise unable to provide consent will still be included as this subpopulation of patients may be at greatest risk of ADEs because of their communication problems.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • patients who take four or fewer medications in the community
  • patients expected to die within 30 days or be transferred to a palliative care unit/another hospital
  • patients without provincial health insurance or who normally live outside that province
  • patients previously enrolled
  • inability for patient or proxy to speak English or French
  • no means of contacting patient or proxy post-discharge

Patients discharged from non-study units will be excluded unless that unit is a transitional care, rehabilitation, or post-acute care unit which bridges the gap between acute medical hospitalization and community services.

Sites / Locations

  • Foothills Medical Centre, Calgary
  • University of Alberta, Edmonton
  • University of British Columbia, St-Paul's Hospital
  • Kingston General Hospital
  • The Ottawa Hospital
  • University Health Network, Toronto
  • McGill University Health Centre

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm Type

No Intervention

Experimental

Arm Label

Control

Intervention

Arm Description

All participants in the control arm will receive medication reconciliation at admission and discharge, and identical follow up, but no prioritized deprescribing list will be generated.

Participants in the intervention arm will be electronically screened using an electronic software "MedSafer" which will generate output of PIMs that will be brought to the attention of the CTU team via the unit pharmacist as "deprescribing opportunities". (Note that in the case of multiple recommendations, they will be limited and prioritized so as to avoid overwhelming the treating team.) Based on their own expert medical judgement, in collaboration with the patient/caregiver and other relevant clinicians, a decision will be made to deprescribe if appropriate by the patient's in-hospital doctors.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Adverse Drug Events within 30 days post-discharge (ascertained via telephone interviewer and adjudicated via clinician reviewers)
Post-discharge telephone interview performed by trained personnel using a modification of the Australian two-step adverse reaction and drug event report. Two trained and blinded clinician reviewers will independently use the Leape and Bates approach to assess whether an ADE was present (yes/no) and if so what was the nature of the injury resulting from it using a four-point Likert scale (definitely preventable, probably preventable, probably not preventable, and definitely not preventable), and assess the probability that an event was attributable to a specific drug that was newly started, changed or continued during hospitalization. In cases of disagreement, a third trained and blinded clinician will review and determine the final assessment.

Secondary Outcome Measures

Number of potentially inappropriate medications
The absolute number of potentially inappropriate medications at discharge among patients who were identified as having a potentially inappropriate medication at admission and for who a deprescribing opportunity was generated and presented to the treating team
Mortality within 30-days post discharge
Death following hospital discharge
Proportion of participants with one or more potentially inappropriate medications deprescribed
Proportion of participants with one or more potentially inappropriate medications deprescribed at discharge between intervention and control
Quality of sleep
Quality of sleep measured by the PROMIS Sleep Disturbance 4a measured pre- and post-hospitalization compared between intervention and control
Adverse events
The proportion of patients who had one or more adverse events (falls, hospitalization, death, unplanned encounter with the healthcare system
Falls post hospital discharge
The proportion of patients with one or more self-reported falls post hospital discharge
Quality of life of participants
Quality of life as measured by EQ5D-5L and reported based on reported Canadian time trade-off values (from 0-1 with higher equal to better quality of life)

Full Information

First Posted
August 31, 2017
Last Updated
May 13, 2021
Sponsor
McGill University Health Centre/Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre
Collaborators
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), University Health Network, Toronto, The Ottawa Hospital, Foothills Medical Centre, University of Alberta, Queen's University, University of British Columbia
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03272607
Brief Title
Reducing Post-discharge Adverse Drug Events Amongst the Elderly: a Multi-centre Electronic Deprescribing Intervention
Official Title
Reducing Post-discharge Adverse Drug Events Amongst the Elderly: a Multi-centre Electronic Deprescribing Intervention
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
May 2021
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
August 22, 2017 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
March 30, 2020 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
March 30, 2020 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Principal Investigator
Name of the Sponsor
McGill University Health Centre/Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre
Collaborators
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), University Health Network, Toronto, The Ottawa Hospital, Foothills Medical Centre, University of Alberta, Queen's University, University of British Columbia

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
Yes

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
Reducing medications and associated side effects in older adults: an electronic hospital-based intervention
Detailed Description
Polypharmacy, or the concomitant use of 5 drugs or more, is a serious health concern and affects more than half of Canadians aged 65 years and older. It is the number one identifiable risk factor for adverse drug events (ADEs), which are responsible for 27,000 hospital admissions annually in Canada and up to 20% of return visits to the hospital within 30 days of discharge. Many ADEs are preventable or ameliorable through interventions to reduce inappropriate prescribing. MedSafer, the intervention software, applies an electronic set of criteria, previously designed and piloted on one thousand (1000) hospitalized patients by a group of Quebec and Ontario internists, geriatricians, palliative care doctors and pharmacists, to identify potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) in the hospitalized elderly and generate instructions for the patient and physician for safe discontinuation. The current study seeks to partially automate the deprescribing process and to demonstrate the efficacy of this type of intervention on adverse drug events at 30-days post hospital discharge. At the time of hospitalization, the patient's medications, co-morbidities, and a measure of frailty will be entered into the MedSafer software which will output an individualized and prioritized deprescription plan for the most responsible physician's consideration. Any subsequent medication changes will be transmitted to relevant community physicians. The study will evaluate the impact of stopping PIMs on the occurrence of ADEs within 30 days of discharge, as compared to usual care. This study will take place on the clinical teaching units (CTUs) at 11 hospitals from seven university hospital centres across Canada. Based on historical data, the investigators estimate a combined 5200 eligible patients per year with nearly 50% taking ten or more medications. Many will have multiple medical co-morbidities such as diabetes, heart disease, and renal insufficiency. A large portion will meet criteria for geriatric syndromes such as frailty and will be at high risk for the development of delirium, falls and functional decline. This population is ideal for a generalizable deprescribing study. All patients aged 65 or older who meet inclusion/exclusion criteria will be enrolled. A trained research assistant will identify eligible patients and medications will be screened using MedSafer. A deprescribing plan will be generated for the CTU team containing the rationale for suggested medication changes and strategies for safe and successful deprescription. The CTU team will then decide, in conjunction with the patient/proxy and relevant consultants, whether to apply the suggested modifications.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Adverse Drug Event
Keywords
Adverse Drug Event, Choosing Wisely Canada, Deprescribing, Elderly, Frailty, High value healthcare, Medication rationalization, Medication stewardship, Polypharmacy

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Supportive Care
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Sequential Assignment
Model Description
The duration of the project will be a total of (approx.) 96 weeks. This is a stepped wedge cluster randomized trial study design (see PDF attachment entitled "MedSafer, Figure 1" - note start date will be August 2017 not July 2016). The intervention component will be administered sequentially to six (6) clusters (by city). A randomly selected single cluster will move from control data collection to intervention data collection every 200 patients or roughly every 12 weeks (96 total weeks), which will be followed by 12 weeks to complete follow up and another 36 to analyze data. Please see PDF attachment entitled "MedSafer, Figure 2" which refers to both parts of the study (quality improvement and follow up components). It describes the follow up component of the study (a 30-day telephone follow-up to ascertain adverse drug events- please note the gray-shaded boxes refer to the Quality Improvement Project-Part 1).
Masking
Outcomes Assessor
Masking Description
Medical chart abstracts compiled at discharge (including any subsequent visits within 30 days) will be combined with the patient telephone interview into a case summary report which will be reviewed independently by two trained and blinded clinician reviewers who will be made up of pharmacists and physicians from each study site (but who will not adjudicate any patients from their own site).
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
6582 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Control
Arm Type
No Intervention
Arm Description
All participants in the control arm will receive medication reconciliation at admission and discharge, and identical follow up, but no prioritized deprescribing list will be generated.
Arm Title
Intervention
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Participants in the intervention arm will be electronically screened using an electronic software "MedSafer" which will generate output of PIMs that will be brought to the attention of the CTU team via the unit pharmacist as "deprescribing opportunities". (Note that in the case of multiple recommendations, they will be limited and prioritized so as to avoid overwhelming the treating team.) Based on their own expert medical judgement, in collaboration with the patient/caregiver and other relevant clinicians, a decision will be made to deprescribe if appropriate by the patient's in-hospital doctors.
Intervention Type
Other
Intervention Name(s)
Deprescribing opportunities
Intervention Description
An electronic intervention that identifies potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) and generates instructions for safe discontinuation, which is presented to the treating physician for their consideration.
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Adverse Drug Events within 30 days post-discharge (ascertained via telephone interviewer and adjudicated via clinician reviewers)
Description
Post-discharge telephone interview performed by trained personnel using a modification of the Australian two-step adverse reaction and drug event report. Two trained and blinded clinician reviewers will independently use the Leape and Bates approach to assess whether an ADE was present (yes/no) and if so what was the nature of the injury resulting from it using a four-point Likert scale (definitely preventable, probably preventable, probably not preventable, and definitely not preventable), and assess the probability that an event was attributable to a specific drug that was newly started, changed or continued during hospitalization. In cases of disagreement, a third trained and blinded clinician will review and determine the final assessment.
Time Frame
Interview performed 30-35 days post-discharge.
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Number of potentially inappropriate medications
Description
The absolute number of potentially inappropriate medications at discharge among patients who were identified as having a potentially inappropriate medication at admission and for who a deprescribing opportunity was generated and presented to the treating team
Time Frame
At hospital discharge and at 30-days post hospital discharge
Title
Mortality within 30-days post discharge
Description
Death following hospital discharge
Time Frame
30-days post hospital discharge
Title
Proportion of participants with one or more potentially inappropriate medications deprescribed
Description
Proportion of participants with one or more potentially inappropriate medications deprescribed at discharge between intervention and control
Time Frame
At hospital discharge
Title
Quality of sleep
Description
Quality of sleep measured by the PROMIS Sleep Disturbance 4a measured pre- and post-hospitalization compared between intervention and control
Time Frame
30 days post hospital discharge
Title
Adverse events
Description
The proportion of patients who had one or more adverse events (falls, hospitalization, death, unplanned encounter with the healthcare system
Time Frame
30 days post hospital discharge
Title
Falls post hospital discharge
Description
The proportion of patients with one or more self-reported falls post hospital discharge
Time Frame
30 days post hospital
Title
Quality of life of participants
Description
Quality of life as measured by EQ5D-5L and reported based on reported Canadian time trade-off values (from 0-1 with higher equal to better quality of life)
Time Frame
At 30-days post hospital discharge
Other Pre-specified Outcome Measures:
Title
Death post hospital discharge
Description
Proportion of patients who died post-hospital discharge compared between the intervention and control groups
Time Frame
30-days post hospital discharge
Title
Unplanned visits with the healthcare system
Description
Proportion of patients with any self-reported unplanned visit with the healthcare system compared between intervention and control (emergency room visits and hospitalizations)
Time Frame
30-days post hospital discharge
Title
Total number of medications at 30-days
Description
Total number of mediations at 30 days (reported as median and interquartile range) compared between intervention and control
Time Frame
At 30-days post discharge
Title
Sensitivity analysis for adverse drug events
Description
Proportion of participants with 1 or more adverse drug events as defined by 4 or more on the 6-point Leape and Bates Likert scale
Time Frame
At 30-days post hospital discharge
Title
Proportion of potentially inappropriate medications that remained stopped
Description
Proportion of potentially inappropriate medications that remained stopped between intervention and control
Time Frame
30-days post hospital discharge

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
65 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: patients aged 65 years and older patients who take five or more medications in the community patients who are cognitively impaired or otherwise unable to provide consent will still be included as this subpopulation of patients may be at greatest risk of ADEs because of their communication problems. Exclusion Criteria: patients who take four or fewer medications in the community patients expected to die within 30 days or be transferred to a palliative care unit/another hospital patients without provincial health insurance or who normally live outside that province patients previously enrolled inability for patient or proxy to speak English or French no means of contacting patient or proxy post-discharge Patients discharged from non-study units will be excluded unless that unit is a transitional care, rehabilitation, or post-acute care unit which bridges the gap between acute medical hospitalization and community services.
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Todd C Lee, MD, MPH
Organizational Affiliation
McGill University Health Centre/Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Foothills Medical Centre, Calgary
City
Calgary
State/Province
Alberta
ZIP/Postal Code
T2N 4Z6
Country
Canada
Facility Name
University of Alberta, Edmonton
City
Edmonton
State/Province
Alberta
ZIP/Postal Code
T6G 2G3
Country
Canada
Facility Name
University of British Columbia, St-Paul's Hospital
City
Vancouver
State/Province
British Columbia
ZIP/Postal Code
V6Z 1Y6
Country
Canada
Facility Name
Kingston General Hospital
City
Kingston
State/Province
Ontario
ZIP/Postal Code
K7L 2V7
Country
Canada
Facility Name
The Ottawa Hospital
City
Ottawa
State/Province
Ontario
ZIP/Postal Code
K1Y 4E9
Country
Canada
Facility Name
University Health Network, Toronto
City
Toronto
State/Province
Ontario
ZIP/Postal Code
M5T 2S8
Country
Canada
Facility Name
McGill University Health Centre
City
Montreal
State/Province
Quebec
ZIP/Postal Code
H4A 3J1
Country
Canada

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
Yes
IPD Sharing Plan Description
We will keep a coded, completely anonymized, database that will be made available to other researchers upon request.
IPD Sharing Time Frame
Eighteen (18) months following the study completion.
Citations:
PubMed Identifier
35040926
Citation
McDonald EG, Wu PE, Rashidi B, Wilson MG, Bortolussi-Courval E, Atique A, Battu K, Bonnici A, Elsayed S, Wilson AG, Papillon-Ferland L, Pilote L, Porter S, Murphy J, Ross SB, Shiu J, Tamblyn R, Whitty R, Xu J, Fabreau G, Haddad T, Palepu A, Khan N, McAlister FA, Downar J, Huang AR, MacMillan TE, Cavalcanti RB, Lee TC. The MedSafer Study-Electronic Decision Support for Deprescribing in Hospitalized Older Adults: A Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Intern Med. 2022 Mar 1;182(3):265-273. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2021.7429.
Results Reference
derived

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Reducing Post-discharge Adverse Drug Events Amongst the Elderly: a Multi-centre Electronic Deprescribing Intervention

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