VDOT for Monitoring Adherence to LTBI Treatment

NCT ID: NCT02641106

Last Updated: 2021-02-05

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

129 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2016-03-08

Study Completion Date

2020-06-30

Brief Summary

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The three-month short-course treatment with isoniazid \[H\] and rifapentine \[P\] (3HP) recently recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention could dramatically increase the number of persons starting and completing treatment for latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI), but TB providers nationwide are hamstrung by the requirement that 3HP only be administered by directly observed therapy (DOT) in which patients are watched taking each medication dose in-person. We developed a novel mHealth application that allows patients to make and send videos of each medication dose ingested that are watched by healthcare providers via a HIPAA-compliant website to remotely monitor LTBI treatment adherence (Video DOT \[VDOT\]). This study will determine whether monitoring patients with VDOT achieves higher treatment completion rates and greater patient acceptability at lower cost than clinic-based in-person DOT.

Detailed Description

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Building on our novel VDOT System that includes text messaging reminders and HIPAA-compliant cloud-based administration, we hypothesize that VDOT can be expanded to provide higher treatment completion rates at a lower cost than in-person DOT for LTBI treatment using 3HP. We propose a randomized controlled trial to address the following specific aims:

Aim 1: To determine whether LTBI treatment completion and adherence are greater for patients treated with 3HP administered via VDOT versus in-person DOT, and to identify patient factors associated with these outcomes; Aim 2: To compare acceptability of treatment by patients on VDOT versus in-person DOT, and identify factors associated with differences in acceptability; Aim 3: To calculate the cost-effectiveness of VDOT compared to in-person DOT for administering 3HP.

To address the study aims we will conduct a randomized controlled trial in which TB contacts and refugees in San Diego who are prescribed 3HP for LTBI treatment by their physician will be randomly assigned to be monitored for adherence via either VDOT or in-person DOT (Figure 2). Approximately 100 patients per year over three years (n=155/arm) will be recruited through the San Diego County TB Control and Refugee Health Program (TCRHP) clinics for the trial. Patients assigned to VDOT will be given a smartphone with service and taught to send videos of themselves taking each weekly medication dose; patients in the in-person DOT arm will visit the clinic each week to be observed by a healthcare worker taking their LTBI medication. Medication adherence will be monitored for all participants until they have taken all 12 doses or 16 weeks (limit recommended by the CDC to complete treatment), to compare treatment adherence rates and patient acceptance across trial arms. Participants will complete brief (20 minute) baseline and follow-up assessment interviews to obtain information about potential confounders and effect modifiers of adherence and patient acceptance regarding their treatment administration method. Cost-benefit analyses will also be conducted to assist in developing policies around the use of VDOT for 3HP. Since participants will be recruited after they have been prescribed 3HP by their healthcare provider and all patient care will be continued through their provider, no medications will be prescribed or treatment decisions made this study.

Conditions

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Tuberculosis Latent Tuberculosis Infection

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

OTHER

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Video Directly Observed Therapy

VDOT arm participants use a smartphone to make a video recording of each weekly medication dose ingested using the VDOT mobile phone app. The VDOT app is programmed to send encrypted, time/date stamped videos to a HIPAA-compliant server as soon as the video recorder is stopped. Clinic staff monitor videos as they arrive using a password protected website and document each medication dose that is taken. Dose 1 is observed in-person; doses 2-12 are observed via videos.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Video Directly Observed Therapy

Intervention Type OTHER

Video Directly Observed Therapy (VDOT) is a novel means of remotely observing patients ingesting medications using videos sent from a smartphone. VDOT was developed and found to be feasible and acceptable for monitoring daily treatment of active TB in San Diego, CA and Tijuana, B.C., Mexico (R21-AI088326; PI: R. Garfein). Patients are taught how to use the VDOT recording app, record medication ingestion, and contact their physician when side effects occur. Participants are trained at the time of their first LTBI treatment dose to ensure participants know how to record videos. All remaining 11 weekly doses are taken and recorded wherever the participant chooses. Clinic staff monitor videos as they arrive using a password protected website and document each medication dose that is taken.

In-Person DOT

In-Person DOT arm participants follow standard-of-care procedures for monitoring ingestion of all medication doses. Participants take their first medication dose at the enrollment visit and return to the clinic once weekly to be observed taking the remaining 11 doses of medication until they complete the 12-dose regimen.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

In-Person DOT

Intervention Type OTHER

Clinic-based, in-person DOT is the standard of care for monitoring adherence for patients taking the 12-dose isoniazid/rifapentine treatment for LTBI. Participants visit the clinic once weekly until all 12 doses are taken or 16 weeks pass, whichever comes first.

Interventions

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Video Directly Observed Therapy

Video Directly Observed Therapy (VDOT) is a novel means of remotely observing patients ingesting medications using videos sent from a smartphone. VDOT was developed and found to be feasible and acceptable for monitoring daily treatment of active TB in San Diego, CA and Tijuana, B.C., Mexico (R21-AI088326; PI: R. Garfein). Patients are taught how to use the VDOT recording app, record medication ingestion, and contact their physician when side effects occur. Participants are trained at the time of their first LTBI treatment dose to ensure participants know how to record videos. All remaining 11 weekly doses are taken and recorded wherever the participant chooses. Clinic staff monitor videos as they arrive using a password protected website and document each medication dose that is taken.

Intervention Type OTHER

In-Person DOT

Clinic-based, in-person DOT is the standard of care for monitoring adherence for patients taking the 12-dose isoniazid/rifapentine treatment for LTBI. Participants visit the clinic once weekly until all 12 doses are taken or 16 weeks pass, whichever comes first.

Intervention Type OTHER

Other Intervention Names

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VDOT Control

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

1. Diagnosis of LTBI and patient's physician determines that they are eligible to receive 3HP
2. Age ≥13 years;
3. No plans to move out of the San Diego area within 4 months of enrollment; and
4. Willing to comply with study procedures and provide informed consent (or assent for minors and parental consent) prior to study enrollment.

Exclusion Criteria

1. Are younger than 13 years old;
2. Plan to move out of San Diego County within 4 months of enrollment;
3. Refuse to allow study staff to review their medical records;
4. Are incarcerated;
5. Have a physical (e.g., blindness) or cognitive disabilities that make VDOT impractical unless someone else in their household can assist them for the duration of the study; or
6. Are using other medications that preclude the use of 3HP (e.g., antiretroviral medication for HIV).
Minimum Eligible Age

13 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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University of California, San Diego

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Richard S Garfein, PhD

Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Richard S Garfein, PhD, MPH

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

University of California, San Diego

Locations

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San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency

San Diego, California, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

Other Identifiers

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150155

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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