Cargando…

MAGIC Study: Aims, Design and Methods using SystemCHANGE™ to Improve Immunosuppressive Medication Adherence in Adult Kidney Transplant Recipients

BACKGROUND: Among adult kidney transplant recipients, non-adherence to immunosuppressive medications is the leading predictor of poor outcomes, including rejection, kidney loss, and death. An alarming one-third of kidney transplant patients experience medication non-adherence even though the problem...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Russell, Cynthia L., Moore, Shirley, Hathaway, Donna, Cheng, An-Lin, Chen, Guoqing, Goggin, Kathy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4947243/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27421884
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12882-016-0285-8
_version_ 1782443139087204352
author Russell, Cynthia L.
Moore, Shirley
Hathaway, Donna
Cheng, An-Lin
Chen, Guoqing
Goggin, Kathy
author_facet Russell, Cynthia L.
Moore, Shirley
Hathaway, Donna
Cheng, An-Lin
Chen, Guoqing
Goggin, Kathy
author_sort Russell, Cynthia L.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Among adult kidney transplant recipients, non-adherence to immunosuppressive medications is the leading predictor of poor outcomes, including rejection, kidney loss, and death. An alarming one-third of kidney transplant patients experience medication non-adherence even though the problem is preventable. Existing adherence interventions have proven marginally effective for those with acute and chronic illnesses and ineffective for adult kidney transplant recipients. Our purpose is to describe the design and methods of the MAGIC (Medication Adherence Given Individual SystemCHANGE™) trial METHODS/DESIGN: We report the design of a randomized controlled trial with an attention-control group to test an innovative 6-month SystemCHANGE™ intervention designed to enhance immunosuppressive medication adherence in adult non-adherent kidney transplant recipients from two transplant centers. Grounded in the Socio-Ecological Model, SystemCHANGE™ seeks to systematically improve medication adherence behaviors by identifying and shaping routines, involving supportive others in routines, and using medication taking feedback through small patient-led experiments to change and maintain behavior. After a 3-month screening phase of 190 eligible adult kidney transplant recipients, those who are <85 % adherent as measured by electronic monitoring, will be randomized into a 6-month SystemCHANGE™ intervention or attention-control phase, followed by a 6-month maintenance phase without intervention or attention. Differences in adherence between the two groups will be assessed at baseline, 6 months (intervention phase) and 12 months (maintenance phase). Adherence mediators (social support, systems-thinking) and moderators (ethnicity, perceived health) are examined. Patient outcomes (creatinine/blood urea nitrogen, infection, acute/chronic rejection, graft loss, death) and cost effectiveness are to be examined. DISCUSSION: Based on the large effect size of 1.4 found in our pilot study, intervention shows great promise for increasing adherence. Grounded in the socio-ecological model, SystemCHANGE™ seeks to systematically improve medication adherence behaviors by identifying and shaping routines, involving supportive others in routines, and using medication taking feedback through small patient-lead experiments to change and maintain behavior. Medication adherence will be measured by electronic monitoring. Medication adherence persistence will be examined by evaluating differences between the two groups at the end of the 6-and 12- month phases. Mediators and moderators of medication adherence will be examined. Patient outcomes will be compared and a cost-effectiveness analysis will be conducted. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Registry: NCT02416479 Registered April 3, 2015
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4947243
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-49472432016-07-17 MAGIC Study: Aims, Design and Methods using SystemCHANGE™ to Improve Immunosuppressive Medication Adherence in Adult Kidney Transplant Recipients Russell, Cynthia L. Moore, Shirley Hathaway, Donna Cheng, An-Lin Chen, Guoqing Goggin, Kathy BMC Nephrol Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Among adult kidney transplant recipients, non-adherence to immunosuppressive medications is the leading predictor of poor outcomes, including rejection, kidney loss, and death. An alarming one-third of kidney transplant patients experience medication non-adherence even though the problem is preventable. Existing adherence interventions have proven marginally effective for those with acute and chronic illnesses and ineffective for adult kidney transplant recipients. Our purpose is to describe the design and methods of the MAGIC (Medication Adherence Given Individual SystemCHANGE™) trial METHODS/DESIGN: We report the design of a randomized controlled trial with an attention-control group to test an innovative 6-month SystemCHANGE™ intervention designed to enhance immunosuppressive medication adherence in adult non-adherent kidney transplant recipients from two transplant centers. Grounded in the Socio-Ecological Model, SystemCHANGE™ seeks to systematically improve medication adherence behaviors by identifying and shaping routines, involving supportive others in routines, and using medication taking feedback through small patient-led experiments to change and maintain behavior. After a 3-month screening phase of 190 eligible adult kidney transplant recipients, those who are <85 % adherent as measured by electronic monitoring, will be randomized into a 6-month SystemCHANGE™ intervention or attention-control phase, followed by a 6-month maintenance phase without intervention or attention. Differences in adherence between the two groups will be assessed at baseline, 6 months (intervention phase) and 12 months (maintenance phase). Adherence mediators (social support, systems-thinking) and moderators (ethnicity, perceived health) are examined. Patient outcomes (creatinine/blood urea nitrogen, infection, acute/chronic rejection, graft loss, death) and cost effectiveness are to be examined. DISCUSSION: Based on the large effect size of 1.4 found in our pilot study, intervention shows great promise for increasing adherence. Grounded in the socio-ecological model, SystemCHANGE™ seeks to systematically improve medication adherence behaviors by identifying and shaping routines, involving supportive others in routines, and using medication taking feedback through small patient-lead experiments to change and maintain behavior. Medication adherence will be measured by electronic monitoring. Medication adherence persistence will be examined by evaluating differences between the two groups at the end of the 6-and 12- month phases. Mediators and moderators of medication adherence will be examined. Patient outcomes will be compared and a cost-effectiveness analysis will be conducted. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Registry: NCT02416479 Registered April 3, 2015 BioMed Central 2016-07-16 /pmc/articles/PMC4947243/ /pubmed/27421884 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12882-016-0285-8 Text en © The Author(s). 2016 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Russell, Cynthia L.
Moore, Shirley
Hathaway, Donna
Cheng, An-Lin
Chen, Guoqing
Goggin, Kathy
MAGIC Study: Aims, Design and Methods using SystemCHANGE™ to Improve Immunosuppressive Medication Adherence in Adult Kidney Transplant Recipients
title MAGIC Study: Aims, Design and Methods using SystemCHANGE™ to Improve Immunosuppressive Medication Adherence in Adult Kidney Transplant Recipients
title_full MAGIC Study: Aims, Design and Methods using SystemCHANGE™ to Improve Immunosuppressive Medication Adherence in Adult Kidney Transplant Recipients
title_fullStr MAGIC Study: Aims, Design and Methods using SystemCHANGE™ to Improve Immunosuppressive Medication Adherence in Adult Kidney Transplant Recipients
title_full_unstemmed MAGIC Study: Aims, Design and Methods using SystemCHANGE™ to Improve Immunosuppressive Medication Adherence in Adult Kidney Transplant Recipients
title_short MAGIC Study: Aims, Design and Methods using SystemCHANGE™ to Improve Immunosuppressive Medication Adherence in Adult Kidney Transplant Recipients
title_sort magic study: aims, design and methods using systemchange™ to improve immunosuppressive medication adherence in adult kidney transplant recipients
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4947243/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27421884
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12882-016-0285-8
work_keys_str_mv AT russellcynthial magicstudyaimsdesignandmethodsusingsystemchangetoimproveimmunosuppressivemedicationadherenceinadultkidneytransplantrecipients
AT mooreshirley magicstudyaimsdesignandmethodsusingsystemchangetoimproveimmunosuppressivemedicationadherenceinadultkidneytransplantrecipients
AT hathawaydonna magicstudyaimsdesignandmethodsusingsystemchangetoimproveimmunosuppressivemedicationadherenceinadultkidneytransplantrecipients
AT chenganlin magicstudyaimsdesignandmethodsusingsystemchangetoimproveimmunosuppressivemedicationadherenceinadultkidneytransplantrecipients
AT chenguoqing magicstudyaimsdesignandmethodsusingsystemchangetoimproveimmunosuppressivemedicationadherenceinadultkidneytransplantrecipients
AT gogginkathy magicstudyaimsdesignandmethodsusingsystemchangetoimproveimmunosuppressivemedicationadherenceinadultkidneytransplantrecipients