Outcomes of Urinary Tract Infection Management by Pharmacists
NCT ID: NCT03184818
Last Updated: 2018-05-02
Study Results
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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COMPLETED
750 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2017-06-16
2018-04-27
Brief Summary
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Pharmacists will identify potential study participants (patients) when they either present with symptoms of a UTI (such as difficulty or painful urination, increased frequency or urgency of urination) without a prescription for an antibiotic from another health care provider, or when they present with a prescription for an antibiotic from another health care provider to treat a UTI. For patients who consent to participate in the study, the pharmacist will screen for eligibility and assess for appropriateness of treatment.
If the patient does not already have a prescription for an antibiotic from another health care provider, the pharmacist will prescribe this for them if they meet certain criteria. If they do already have a prescription from another health care provider, the pharmacist will assess the appropriateness of the prescription and work with the patient to potentially change it to make it more appropriate, if necessary. If the pharmacist identifies any complicating factors that require a physician's assessment, the patient will be referred to their physician. The enrolled patients will also have a 2-week follow-up to assess for resolution of symptoms, unintended effects, and adherence to the treatment regimen. All data will be collected in a web-based registry that will maintain the patient's confidentiality outside of the pharmacy (i.e. patient initials, date of birth, and study identification (ID) number will be the only patient identifiers collected by the researchers). A patient satisfaction survey will also be administered via email.
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Detailed Description
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Design: prospective web-based registry Setting: \~40 community pharmacies in New Brunswick, Canada Patients: Any adult patient presenting to a pharmacy with symptoms suggestive of urinary tract infection (UTI) and assessed to be uncomplicated; or those presenting with a prescription for antibiotics from another healthcare provider for a UTI that are assessed to be uncomplicated or asymptomatic bacteriuria.
Intervention: Pharmacists will assess symptoms and prescribe antibiotics or perform prescription adaptation or therapeutic substitution, as necessary. They will also discontinue antibiotics for asymptomatic bacteriuria in cases where treatment is unnecessary. Follow-up will occur at 2 weeks to assess for clinical cure, as well as adverse reactions, adherence to the treatment regimen, early recurrence of infection, and other outcomes. Additional follow-up will occur as needed, and will also be captured in the registry.
Outcomes: The primary outcome will be clinical cure at 2 weeks. Secondary outcomes will include medications used, number and nature of pharmacist interventions, follow-ups conducted, patient adherence to initial recommendations and follow up, adverse events, treatment failures (including reasons for; such as adherence, delay in accessing care, missed baseline complicating factors, presence of a resistant organism, and complications such as pyelonephritis), and patient satisfaction.
Quality assurance: Data will be collected via a secure web-based portal. Data quality will be monitored by EPICORE Centre, University of Alberta, and site audits will be performed periodically.
Analytical plan: Most outcomes will be descriptive in nature. Target sample size of 750 patients over 8 months; this is a bit more than necessary for the primary outcome, but the intention is to also have enough power for analyses of some of the secondary outcomes.
Conditions
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Study Design
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OTHER
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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No antibacterial from other provider (Arm 1)
Patients with symptomatic, uncomplicated urinary tract infection presenting without a prescription for an antibacterial from another health care practitioner.
Advanced care
The pharmacist will assess for symptoms of urinary tract infection and, for patients in Arm 1, prescribe antibacterials when appropriate. For patients in Arm 2, pharmacists will ensure optimal therapy and adapt or perform therapeutic substitution when appropriate (or work with the patient to discontinue therapy or just put the prescription on file in instances where the patient is assessed to have asymptomatic bacteriuria for which treatment is inappropriate).
Antibacterial from other provider (Arm 2)
Patients with symptomatic, uncomplicated urinary tract infection or asymptomatic bacteriuria presenting with a prescription for an antibacterial from another health care practitioner.
Advanced care
The pharmacist will assess for symptoms of urinary tract infection and, for patients in Arm 1, prescribe antibacterials when appropriate. For patients in Arm 2, pharmacists will ensure optimal therapy and adapt or perform therapeutic substitution when appropriate (or work with the patient to discontinue therapy or just put the prescription on file in instances where the patient is assessed to have asymptomatic bacteriuria for which treatment is inappropriate).
Interventions
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Advanced care
The pharmacist will assess for symptoms of urinary tract infection and, for patients in Arm 1, prescribe antibacterials when appropriate. For patients in Arm 2, pharmacists will ensure optimal therapy and adapt or perform therapeutic substitution when appropriate (or work with the patient to discontinue therapy or just put the prescription on file in instances where the patient is assessed to have asymptomatic bacteriuria for which treatment is inappropriate).
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
19 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Horizon Health Network
OTHER
New Brunswick Pharmacists' Association
UNKNOWN
Loblaw Companies Ltd.
UNKNOWN
Pharmasave Drugs (Atlantic) Ltd.
UNKNOWN
Alberta Pharmacists Association
UNKNOWN
The Jean Coutu Group (PJC) Inc.
UNKNOWN
University of Alberta
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Ross T. Tsuyuki
Professor of Medicine (Cardiology) and Director, EPICORE Centre, University of Alberta
Principal Investigators
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Ross T Tsuyuki, BSc(Pharm), PharmD, MSc
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Department of Medicine, University of Alberta
Daniel J Smyth, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Division of Infectious Diseases, Horizon Health Network
Locations
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EPICORE Centre, University of Alberta
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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Pro00072493
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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