Transforming Opioid Prescribing in Primary Care

NCT ID: NCT01909076

Last Updated: 2016-03-03

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

53 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2014-01-31

Study Completion Date

2016-03-31

Brief Summary

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Prescription opioid misuse is a significant public health problem as well as a patient safety concern. Primary care providers are the leading prescribers of opioids for chronic pain, yet few providers follow standard practice guidelines regarding assessment and monitoring. The investigators propose a novel system change in delivery of primary care services to decrease misuse of and addiction to prescription opioids for patients with chronic pain.

The proposed intervention for the overall project includes a nurse-managed registry for planning individual patient care and conducting population-based care for a population of patients receiving opioids for chronic pain. Academic detailing to clinicians is another effective way to improve care. Finally, the researchers will create a knowledge management tool to facilitate guideline adherence. This tool will be accessible via an internet link, and will include validated instruments to assess patient status and also to facilitate physician adherence to suggested monitoring.

Detailed Description

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This project will implement interventions in the primary care setting to improve management of patients prescribed opioid therapy for chronic non-cancer pain.

Prescription opioid misuse is a significant current public health problem as well as a patient safety concern. Primary care providers are the leading prescribers of opioids for chronic pain, yet few providers follow standard practice guidelines regarding assessment and monitoring. The investigators propose a novel system change in delivery of primary care services to decrease misuse of and addiction to prescription opioids for patients with chronic pain.

The researchers will conduct a cluster randomized controlled trial, randomizing 50 primary care providers and their estimated 500 patients to the intervention condition (nurse care management, registry, electronic decision support tools, and academic detailing) or control condition (electronic decision support tools and educational outreach only). The primary outcomes, measured at twelve months, are PCP adherence to chronic opioid therapy guidelines and opioid misuse.

Conditions

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Chronic Pain Opioid-Related Disorders

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

PREVENTION

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Control PCPs and their patients

PCPs randomized to the control condition will receive electronic decision support tools. Patients of control PCPs will receive education materials that will be developed and made available to both control and intervention patients.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Electronic decision support tools

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Electronic decision support tools available to both control and intervention PCPs include patient pain assessments, (Brief Pain Inventory, Pain/Enjoyment/General Function "PEG"), substance abuse (DAST, AUDIT) depression (PHQ9), PTSD (PTSD ChecklistCivilian), and risk of prescription drug misuse (SOAPP and COMM). The tools calculate scores with recommendation for specific action for each tool, when appropriate.

Enhanced patient education materials

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Patient education materials will be developed and made available to both control and intervention patients. The investigators will design the materials for patients with low literacy, using pictures and simple graphics to augment written language. The research staff will make PDFs of the materials available on the study website during and after the project.

Intervention PCPs and patients

The Intervention Condition has three main components: access to nurse care management, access to the patient registry, and academic detailing for intervention PCPs. Intervention PCPs will also receive the control intervention of electronic decision support tools, and patients of intervention PCPs will receive the same patient education materials as patients of control PCPs.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Electronic decision support tools

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Electronic decision support tools available to both control and intervention PCPs include patient pain assessments, (Brief Pain Inventory, Pain/Enjoyment/General Function "PEG"), substance abuse (DAST, AUDIT) depression (PHQ9), PTSD (PTSD ChecklistCivilian), and risk of prescription drug misuse (SOAPP and COMM). The tools calculate scores with recommendation for specific action for each tool, when appropriate.

Enhanced patient education materials

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Patient education materials will be developed and made available to both control and intervention patients. The investigators will design the materials for patients with low literacy, using pictures and simple graphics to augment written language. The research staff will make PDFs of the materials available on the study website during and after the project.

Nurse care management

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

The nurse/care management intervention will be modeled on BMC's successful collaborative care office-based opioid treatment (OBOT) program. One fulltime nurse care manager will work with PCPs assigned to the intervention condition. The care manager will be based centrally, in the Section of General Internal Medicine, and will divide his/her time between the 3 health centers. The main focus of the nurse care manager is to assure that patients are receiving guideline-adherent care, which involves appropriate clinical assessments, opioid treatment agreements, refill management, administering monitoring tools according to risk level (urine toxicology screen, pill counts, PMP data extraction) and timely physician visits to assess pain (minimum every 6 months).

Electronic Patient Registry

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

The registry will be a freestanding centralized disease management application and built using standard database technology. This system will communicate with the electronic medical record (EMR) at each community health center and with the Massachusetts State Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP) system. Data that will feed into the registry include clinical data recorded from the EMR (documentation from other clinicians and labs), data from clinical users entered into the registry via pain and opioid management forms, and the PMP. The nurse care manager will use a custom registry interface to monitor key practice activities across the entire practice at each site. The nurse care manager will use population management tools to provide aggregate measures for quality monitoring and workforce management. All quality metrics can be downloaded in aggregate form for further analysis.

Academic detailing

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

All PCPs in the intervention group will receive one 30 minute individual visit 23 months after project implementation at the PCP's practice site. The visits will be conducted with at least one of the study experts in pain medication management. Visit content will combine elements of audit and feedback (e.g. review registry of individual PCP compared with that of peers and goals) as well as traditional educational outreach. Specifically, experts will review each aspect of guideline concordant care (assessment of risk and appropriateness for opioid medication, medication dosing, monitoring for harm/adherence, and pain outcomes) to solicit barriers to implementation or lack of knowledge on the underlying evidence for each aspect of care. The experts will work with the individual PCPs to address barriers identified using motivational interviewing as needed to facilitate behavioral change in applying guideline concordant care.

Interventions

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Electronic decision support tools

Electronic decision support tools available to both control and intervention PCPs include patient pain assessments, (Brief Pain Inventory, Pain/Enjoyment/General Function "PEG"), substance abuse (DAST, AUDIT) depression (PHQ9), PTSD (PTSD ChecklistCivilian), and risk of prescription drug misuse (SOAPP and COMM). The tools calculate scores with recommendation for specific action for each tool, when appropriate.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Enhanced patient education materials

Patient education materials will be developed and made available to both control and intervention patients. The investigators will design the materials for patients with low literacy, using pictures and simple graphics to augment written language. The research staff will make PDFs of the materials available on the study website during and after the project.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Nurse care management

The nurse/care management intervention will be modeled on BMC's successful collaborative care office-based opioid treatment (OBOT) program. One fulltime nurse care manager will work with PCPs assigned to the intervention condition. The care manager will be based centrally, in the Section of General Internal Medicine, and will divide his/her time between the 3 health centers. The main focus of the nurse care manager is to assure that patients are receiving guideline-adherent care, which involves appropriate clinical assessments, opioid treatment agreements, refill management, administering monitoring tools according to risk level (urine toxicology screen, pill counts, PMP data extraction) and timely physician visits to assess pain (minimum every 6 months).

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Electronic Patient Registry

The registry will be a freestanding centralized disease management application and built using standard database technology. This system will communicate with the electronic medical record (EMR) at each community health center and with the Massachusetts State Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP) system. Data that will feed into the registry include clinical data recorded from the EMR (documentation from other clinicians and labs), data from clinical users entered into the registry via pain and opioid management forms, and the PMP. The nurse care manager will use a custom registry interface to monitor key practice activities across the entire practice at each site. The nurse care manager will use population management tools to provide aggregate measures for quality monitoring and workforce management. All quality metrics can be downloaded in aggregate form for further analysis.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Academic detailing

All PCPs in the intervention group will receive one 30 minute individual visit 23 months after project implementation at the PCP's practice site. The visits will be conducted with at least one of the study experts in pain medication management. Visit content will combine elements of audit and feedback (e.g. review registry of individual PCP compared with that of peers and goals) as well as traditional educational outreach. Specifically, experts will review each aspect of guideline concordant care (assessment of risk and appropriateness for opioid medication, medication dosing, monitoring for harm/adherence, and pain outcomes) to solicit barriers to implementation or lack of knowledge on the underlying evidence for each aspect of care. The experts will work with the individual PCPs to address barriers identified using motivational interviewing as needed to facilitate behavioral change in applying guideline concordant care.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* All PCPs (physicians, doctors of osteopathy, nurse practitioners, and physicians' assistants) at participating sites with 4 patients prescribed opioid treatment along with their patients greater than or equal to age 18 who have 1) 3 or more completed visits to the primary care practice; 2) long-term opioid treatment defined by 3 or more opioid prescriptions written at least 21 days apart within 6 months; and 3) an inpatient or outpatient ICD9CM diagnosis for musculoskeletal or neuropathic pain. In addition, non-PCP staff at the health centers and at the Massachusetts State PMP who agree to be included in the qualitative assessments will be included and will be considered subjects. Note that the investigators have limited inclusion in the study to PCPs with at least 4 patients on chronic opioid therapy because it was determined that for PCPs with fewer than 4 patients the time burden associated with the study (meeting with nurse care manager, receiving academic detailing etc) would not be justified.

Exclusion Criteria

* Patients currently receiving care for cancer, except non-melanoma skin cancer. Patients with remote (\>5 years) histories being disease-free from other cancers (e.g. breast, colon, prostate) will not be excluded due to the low risk of current cancer related pain. PCPs and staff who do not consent to the study.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)

NIH

Sponsor Role collaborator

Boston Medical Center

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Karen Lasser

BMC Attending Physician

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Karen Lasser, MD, MPH

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Boston Medical Center

Jane E Liebschutz, MD, MPH

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Boston Medical Center

Locations

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Boston Medical Center

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

References

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Liebschutz JM, Xuan Z, Shanahan CW, LaRochelle M, Keosaian J, Beers D, Guara G, O'Connor K, Alford DP, Parker V, Weiss RD, Samet JH, Crosson J, Cushman PA, Lasser KE. Improving Adherence to Long-term Opioid Therapy Guidelines to Reduce Opioid Misuse in Primary Care: A Cluster-Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Intern Med. 2017 Sep 1;177(9):1265-1272. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2017.2468.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 28715535 (View on PubMed)

Lasser KE, Shanahan C, Parker V, Beers D, Xuan Z, Heymann O, Lange A, Liebschutz JM. A Multicomponent Intervention to Improve Primary Care Provider Adherence to Chronic Opioid Therapy Guidelines and Reduce Opioid Misuse: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial Protocol. J Subst Abuse Treat. 2016 Jan;60:101-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jsat.2015.06.018. Epub 2015 Jul 15.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 26256769 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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R01DA034252-01

Identifier Type: NIH

Identifier Source: secondary_id

View Link

R01DA034252-01

Identifier Type: NIH

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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