Treatment Trials

51 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions

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RECRUITING
HIV and Alcohol Research Center Focused on Polypharmacy (HARP) Pilot 2 (2nd HARP Pilot Intervention)
Description

The focus of this pilot will be on falls and neurocognitive symptoms, and the impact of alcohol, cannabis use, and medications on these outcomes. The rationale is that alcohol use at any level may interact with neurocognitively active medications, alcohol, and cannabis use leading to falls and impaired cognition.

RECRUITING
Safety and Effectiveness of Minimally Invasive Micro Sclerostomy (MIMS®) to Reduce Intraocular Pressure in Open-Angle Glaucoma Which is Not Controlled Despite Polypharmacy
Description

The goal of this clinical trial is to show non-inferiority of the MIMS® device/procedure with Mitomycin-C, in terms of its surgical success rate, compared to trabeculectomy with Mitomycin-C in subjects diagnosed with primary open angle glaucoma, whose intraocular pressure is not controlled despite polypharmacy. Eligible screened participants will undergo the MIMS® procedure and will be followed for a period of 12 months in this single-arm study. Investigators will compare the results of this study to the surgical success rate of traditional trabeculectomy with Mitomycin-C.

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Reducing High-Risk Geriatric Polypharmacy Via EHR Nudges R01 Trial
Description

High-risk polypharmacy is common among older adults in the United States, is particularly dangerous for individuals with dementia or cognitive impairment, and is associated with harms such as adverse drug reactions, falls, and higher costs of care. This project aims to test in a pragmatic clinic-randomized controlled trial two electronic health record-based behavioral economic nudges to help clinicians reduce high-risk polypharmacy among their older adult patients and in the subgroup with dementia or cognitive impairment. The main questions this trial aims to answer are: Aim 1: To evaluate the effects of an EHR-based commitment nudge, a justification nudge, and the combination of both nudges on a composite measure of high-risk polypharmacy via a pragmatic randomized controlled trial. The investigators will use cluster randomization in which primary care clinics are randomized to receive 0, 1, or 2 nudges using a factorial design. The nudges will run for 18 months, followed by 12 months of observation to assess persistence of effects. Aim 2: To qualitatively and quantitatively assess clinician experiences with the EHR-based nudges, including their acceptability and effects on workflow. At the conclusion of the intervention period, the investigators will perform semi-structured interviews and field a clinician survey.

Conditions
COMPLETED
A Patient-facing Tool to Reduce Opioid-Psychotropic Polypharmacy in People Living With Dementia (PLWD)
Description

The goal of this project is to address Central nervous system-active polypharmacy (CNS polyRx) in people with living dementia (PLWD) through focus group and an educational intervention. This project involves three interconnected Aims and includes engaging clinicians, patients/PLWD, and care partners (CP). AIM 1 will be completed for the development of the educational tool and is not considered a clinical trial. Therefore, this registration includes the clinical trial (Aims 2 and 3) of the project. The study hypothesizes that the total standardized daily dosage (TSDD) of the medication classes contributing to CNS polyRx will decline from baseline to 4 months in participants receiving the nudge intervention.

COMPLETED
HIV and Alcohol Research Center Focused on Polypharmacy (HARP) Pilot 1
Description

This pilot intervention will consist of a brief intervention for patients with HIV who take 5 or more medications and currently (within the past month) consume alcohol. The focus of this pilot will be on bothersome symptoms and the impact of alcohol use and medications on these symptoms. The rationale is that any alcohol use may interact with medications in serious ways leading to adverse outcomes, including bothersome symptoms.

Conditions
RECRUITING
Decreasing Polypharmacy in Older Adults With Curable Cancers Trial
Description

This is a single-site cluster-randomized trial to assess efficacy and implementation outcomes of deprescribing interventions in 72 older adults with polypharmacy (PP) and curable cancers initiating chemotherapy. Oncologists (as the cluster) will enroll 6 patients each and will be randomized to either a pharmacist-led deprescribing intervention or patient education intervention. Initial focus groups with oncologists, nurses, pharmacists, primary care physicians, and patients will provide data for initial adaptations to the pharmacist-led intervention arm, and 8 patients will be enrolled as a pre-trial cohort to further refine and adapt the pharmacist-led intervention.

Conditions
UNKNOWN
Simulation of Risk of Adverse Drug Events Associated With the Initiation of Drugs Repurposed for the Treatment of COVID-19 in Adults With Polypharmacy Using Data From Large Medicare and Commercially Insured Populations
Description

This retrospective study aims to perform a medication risk stratification using drug claims data and to simulate the impact of the addition of various repurposed drugs on the Medication Risk Score (MRS) in a health insurance population. Our clinical tool would enable us to identify potential multi-drug interactions and potentially reduce the risk of adverse drug events (ADE) developing in these patients infected with COVID-19.

COMPLETED
Simulation of Risk of Adverse Drug Events Associated With the Initiation of Drugs Repurposed for the Treatment of COVID-19 in Frail Elderly Adults With Polypharmacy
Description

This retrospective study aims to perform a medication risk stratification using drug claims data and to simulate the impact of the addition of various repurposed drugs on the Medication Risk Score (MRS) in elderly people enrolled in PACE organizations. Our clinical tool would enable to identify potential multi-drug interactions and potentially reduce the risk of adverse drug events (ADE) developing in elderly patients infected with COVID-19.

COMPLETED
Improving Wisely - Polypharmacy
Description

This is a randomized controlled trial that uses an audit and feedback intervention to alert primary care physicians who are outliers in one or more metrics related to high risk prescribing of participants' outlier status. Primary care physicians will be randomized to the intervention or control arm, except in California, where all outliers will be notified. The investigators will evaluate the impact of the intervention on prescribing patterns.

UNKNOWN
Reducing High-Risk Geriatric Polypharmacy Via EHR Nudges: Pilot Phase
Description

Polypharmacy is common among older adults in the United States and is associated with harms such as adverse drug reactions and higher costs of care. This pilot-phase project is designed to test two electronic health record (EHR)-based behavioral economic nudges to help primary care clinicians reduce the rate of high-risk polypharmacy among their older adult patients.

COMPLETED
Using Pharmacogenetics to Identify Patients With Polypharmacy at Risk of Medication Adverse Effects
Description

The Researchers are trying to learn more about how individuals break down and process medications based on their genes. The Researchers want to find out whether subjects will have fewer side effects if they take different medications based on their pharmacogenomics profile.

COMPLETED
Medication Optimization Using Pharmacogenetic Testing and the G-DIG to Reduce Polypharmacy in a Mental Health Population
Description

Use of polypharmacy has significantly increased over the past two decades, which has unproven clinical benefit and is associate with an increased the risk of adverse side effects. Pharmacogenetic assays, such as the Genecept® Assay, have the purported benefit of being able to predict response(s) to specific medication based on genetic markers. Thus, this study is a 12-week open-label, naturalistic study of the provision of pharmacogenetic testing and a computerized decision tool for providers to determine the potential efficacy of the assay to reduce polypharmacy and improve patient outcomes.

WITHDRAWN
Polypharmacy-related Adverse Events in Critically Ill Children
Description

The purpose of this study is to learn how 2 medications (fentanyl and dexmedetomidine) affect how sick children think and interact with their environments.

Conditions
COMPLETED
A Randomized Controlled Trial to Deprescribe for Older Patients With Polypharmacy
Description

This randomized, controlled trial will evaluate the effects of an intervention to reduce exposure to medications among hospitalized older adults discharged to skilled nursing facilities (SNFs). The goal of the intervention is to safely deprescribe medications, as defined by dose reductions and stopped medications, based on a combination of clinical criteria and patient preferences. The investigators will evaluate the effects of the intervention on the total number of medications prescribed to patients at hospital and SNF discharge and at home 90-days after SNF discharge along with the prevalence of eight geriatric syndromes, medication adherence, and health status.

UNKNOWN
Evaluation of Belimumab Impact on a BLyS Activity Signature Test in the Absence of Confounding Polypharmacy
Description

This will be an open label, non-randomized trial of belimumab in at least 20 subjects to test the feasibility of belimumab as a single agent and to capitalize on simplified background treatment regimens to determine immunologic differences between patients who do versus do not meet clinical response criteria.

WITHDRAWN
Measuring the Impact of an Interdisciplinary Polypharmacy Clinic Within a Patient-centered Medical Home
Description

Title: Measuring the impact of an interdisciplinary polypharmacy clinic within a patient-centered medical home Objectives: The primary objective of this project will be to track the types of interventions made in an interdisciplinary polypharmacy clinic to improve medication regimens and medication burden. Polypharmacy has been well documented in the literature as a risk for medication errors, adverse drug events, and morbidity. Team visits, including complete medication reviews, by pharmacists and physicians within a National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) tier 3 patient-centered medical home (PCMH) at an academic medical center, can improve medication regimens. Secondary objectives include (1) measuring each patient's quality of life at baseline and one month post-intervention and (2) tracking the cost of medication additions and discontinuations. Methods: Patients taking ten or more chronic medications will be identified for referral to the polypharmacy clinic from a report generated from the electronic medical record. The polypharmacy clinic will be staffed by a pharmacist and medical resident with oversight from an attending physician who specializes in geriatrics. Drug-related problems identified during the visit will be resolved and categorized based upon indication, efficacy, cost, safety, and compliance. The numbers and types of interventions made, both during the primary visit and anticipated in the future, will be tracked. The 12-item short form (SF-12) survey will also be administered at baseline and one month post intervention. The increase or decrease in cost for medications added and removed during these visits will be captured using the average wholesale prices. Preliminary Results Using descriptive statistics, the types of drug-related problems identified and interventions made will be reported. Changes in quality of life and monthly medication costs will also be described.

Conditions
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Effect of Medication Management at Home Via Pharmacy Home Televisits
Description

Older Veterans, particularly those with multiple chronic conditions requiring complex medication regimens, are more susceptible to adverse effects of medications. In this study, the investigators will examine the effect of a pharmacist led medication management intervention delivered by home televisit on improving medication use. The investigators anticipate that televisit to home by pharmacist for medication management may enhance use of medications at home by Veterans particularly those with complex medication regimens.

RECRUITING
ALIGN: Aligning Medications With What Matters Most (Demonstration)
Description

The goal of this clinical trial is to test the effectiveness of a pharmacist-led, primary care-based de-prescribing intervention for people living with dementia (PLWD) and the person's care partners. The intervention consists of the following strategies: 1) a de-prescribing educational brochure designed to activate the patient and care partner; 2) a single telehealth visit in which an embedded clinical pharmacist discusses the benefits and harms of the patient's medications with the patient and care partner in the context of the person's goals and preferences; and 3) pharmacist-PCP communication in which the pharmacist provides tailored de-prescribing recommendations designed to be useful and actionable for the PCP. The investigators will compare the intervention group with the waitlist control group to see if there is a difference in the primary outcome, the proportion of patients who deprescribe at least one medication by 3 months.

COMPLETED
Older Adults' Readiness to Stop Prescribed Medications
Description

Polypharmacy, regular use of 5+ prescribed medications, is common among older adults and potentially harmful. Patients differ in their concern about medications, comfort in raising questions about them, and trust and confidence in physician judgment. This pilot observational research will determine older adults' readiness to "deprescribe," that is, stop prescribed medications under physician guidance.

RECRUITING
Adapting the Shed-MEDS Deprescribing Intervention to Dementia Care in Assisted Living
Description

This single-arm pilot study will evaluate the effects of an intervention to reduce exposure to unnecessary or potentially harmful medications among residents with dementia living in an assisted living facility. The goal of the intervention is to safely deprescribe medications (defined by dose reductions and stopped medications), based on a combination of clinical criteria and resident/surrogate preferences. The investigators will evaluate the effects of the intervention on the total number of medications deprescribed from enrollment at 30, 60, and 90 days along with resident/surrogate reports of quality of life at enrollment and 90 days.

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Deprescribing for Older Adults After Hospital Discharge in Home Health Care
Description

The purpose of this study is to examine the feasibility of providing a medication optimization program to improve patient health outcomes during the transition from hospital to home. This is because the period after hospital discharge is critical to long-term recovery, overall quality of life, and prevention of future hospitalizations.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Bundled Hyperpolypharmacy Deprescribing
Description

Older patients using many prescription drugs (hyperpolypharmacy) may be at increased risk of adverse drug effects. This randomized controlled trial tested the effectiveness and safety of a quality intervention intended to reduce hyperpolypharmacy. The study was set at Kaiser Permanente Northern California, an integrated health system with multiple pre-existing deprescribing workflows. Eligible patients were aged ≥76 years using ≥10 prescription medications. The intervention included physician-pharmacist collaborative drug therapy management, standard-of-care practice recommendations, shared decision-making, and deprescribing protocols administered by telephone over multiple cycles for a maximum of 180 days after allocation. A priori primary effectiveness endpoints included change in the number of medications and in the prevalence of geriatric syndrome from 181-365 days after allocation. Second endpoints included utilization and adverse drug withdrawal effects. Information was obtained from the electronic health record.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Shared Decision Making About Medication Use for People With Multiple Health Problems
Description

The Shared Decision Making about Medication Use for People with Multiple Health Problems study will assess the feasibility and acceptability of a deprescribing educational intervention in primary care for patients with mild cognitive impairment or dementia and/or multiple chronic conditions (MCC), the patients' care partners, clinicians, and medical assistants. The intervention consists of the following strategies: 1) a patient/caregiver component focused on education and activation about deprescribing, and 2) a clinician component focused on increasing clinician awareness about options and processes for deprescribing in the MCI/dementia and/or MCC population. Clinicians will each be asked to participate in a single, 15-minute educational session on deprescribing, and medical residents will receive a 45-minute lecture. Patients, caregivers, clinicians, and medical assistants will participate in a single one-on-one debriefing interview.

ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
Preemptive Pharmacogenomics Testing Among Geriatric Patients
Description

The primary goal of this study is to conduct pharmacogenomics testing (a type of DNA test) within an aging population and measure the impact of this test on medication selection, dosing, healthcare utilization, and costs of care.

COMPLETED
MIDAS Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial of Implementation Strategies to Optimize Use of Medications in VA Clinical Settings
Description

Scientific advances are constantly leading to better treatments. However, it is quite challenging for healthcare systems, including VA, to ask very busy providers to change the way they practice. The MIDAS QUERI program will help providers improve the way they treat VA patients for three common conditions, using specific strategies to ensure the reliable delivery of these treatments. The first project will focus on reducing potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) use using the VIONE practice, developed in VA. The second project will focus on better use of drugs called direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) for patients with a history of severe blood clots or an abnormal heart rhythm. The third project will focus on increasing the use of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia as the first-line treatment for insomnia instead of sleep medications. The investigators will test two implementation approaches to improve medication use within these topics.

COMPLETED
Aligning Medications With What Matters Most
Description

The Aligning Medications with What Matters Most (ALIGN) study will assess the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of a deprescribing intervention to reduce medication regimen complexity and treatment burden for people living with dementia (PLWD) and their care partners.

COMPLETED
Psychological and Clinical Factors That Predict Intent to Deprescribe Medications Among Older Adults
Description

The investigators are conducting two experimental surveys to explore clinical and psychological factors that influence older adults' willingness to stop medications in the face of polypharmacy.

COMPLETED
Development & Pilot of the Technology-Enabled Alliance for Medication Therapy Management
Description

The investigators will link community pharmacy and primary care practices via a shared electronic health record to improve medication therapy management for older patients taking complex prescription (Rx) regimens. The Technology-Enabled Alliance for Medication Therapy Management (TEAM) intervention will link a major, national community pharmacy chain (Walgreens) to primary care practices (Access Community Health Network) via a shared electronic health record (EHR) platform (Epic, Verona WI). Through shared access to patients' medical records, pharmacists can perform comprehensive medication therapy management services, document and communicate patients' Rx challenges for review and action by primary care providers. The aims of this investigation are to: 1. Evaluate the fidelity and efficacy of the TEAM intervention to promote healthcare provider counseling, medication reconciliation, and safe regimen use among adults taking complex Rx regimens. 2. Explore patient, healthcare provider (pharmacist, prescriber), community pharmacy and/or primary care practice barriers to implementation. 3. Determine the costs of the TEAM intervention from both a community pharmacy and primary care practice perspective.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Reducing Costs by Deprescribing Medications
Description

The purpose of the study is to implement a pharmacist-led deprescribing intervention for adults 65 and older taking 10 or more medications at University of Texas (UT) Physicians clinics and to assess the effect of the pharmacist intervention on the incidence of adverse drug reactions, emergency room visits, and hospitalizations as well as costs to the patient and to the healthcare system in adults 65 and older taking 10 or more medications treated at UT Physicians.

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Effectiveness of PGx Testing
Description

The purpose of this study is to determine the clinical and economic effectiveness of a pharmacogenomic (PGx) approach to prescribing medications in patients with high-risk polypharmacy in an integrated healthcare delivery system. Investigators hypothesize that patients who receive the RightMed® PGx test from OneOme, LLC with subsequent counseling of their prescribers by a study pharmacist, as needed, on the appropriateness of their prescribed medications will experience lower one-year follow-up healthcare utilization and expenditures compared to control patients who receive usual care.

Conditions