Decision Aid for Renal Therapy

NCT ID: NCT03522740

Last Updated: 2022-04-27

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

Get a concise snapshot of the trial, including recruitment status, study phase, enrollment targets, and key timeline milestones.

Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

400 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2018-05-30

Study Completion Date

2021-09-21

Brief Summary

Review the sponsor-provided synopsis that highlights what the study is about and why it is being conducted.

Good communication among patients, their families and loved ones, and their medical care providers is important when figuring out how to treat chronic diseases like kidney disease. A lot of people may not know all of their choices for how to treat kidney disease, and this can lead to rushed decisions or even a sense that there weren't any choices to make. In this study, the investigators are trying to find out if a decision-aid program on a computer can help people with kidney disease have more confidence in their decisions and have better agreement about their decisions with their families and loved ones.

The DART study will be conducted at four sites in different areas of the country: Boston, Massachusetts; Portland, Maine; Chicago, Illinois; and San Diego, California. The study will enroll a total of 400 people with kidney disease at these four sites.

Detailed Description

Dive into the extended narrative that explains the scientific background, objectives, and procedures in greater depth.

Aligning patient preferences (goals of care and values) with treatment is essential for quality health care. Treatment of life-limiting illness is especially preference-sensitive, where high-intensity care often offers marginal survival benefit but can worsen quality of life. Elderly persons with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) may face a choice between high-intensity dialysis and low-intensity conservative management (CM). This decision is of special import because it is often irreversible as dialysis itself can diminish residual kidney function. In adults over 70 years-old with advanced CKD, dialysis on average confers only marginally better survival than medical management while reducing independence and mobility and increasing medical procedures. Poor communication about benefits and risks of treatment options available to these patients results in decisional conflict: a state of uncertainty associated with making a choice that best reflects values and preferences. However, it is unclear how to best educate patients and their care-partners about their treatment choices and the importance of advance care planning.

The objective of this trial is to compare the effectiveness of two widely used strategies, in-person education alone versus in-person education plus an interactive web-based decision aid, in: 1) reducing decisional conflict and empowering patients and care-partners to select treatment aligned with patient preferences; and 2) improving care-partners' ability to confidently and accurately express patients' preferences when patients are unable (proxy decision-making).

The hypothesis is that, compared to traditional in-person education, use of the Decision Aid for Renal Therapy (DART) will decrease decisional conflict, increase completion of advance directives, improve patient and caregiver satisfaction with treatment (quantitative outcomes), and contribute to greater patient engagement, satisfaction with decision-making, and care-partner concordance (qualitative and quantitative outcomes).

DART is a web-based multimedia decision-aid that is designed to be accessible to individuals with limited health literacy. The investigators will evaluate whether use of DART results in greater patient understanding of options, leading to better discussions with care providers, and ultimately lower decisional conflict and greater completion of advanced directives compared with the comparator, in-person education. DART is replicable, consistent, can be shared with care-partners, and can be viewed in the comfort of the patient's home.

This randomized clinical trial targeting 400 older adults with advanced kidney disease and as many as 400 of their care-partners compares the effectiveness of DART plus in-person education to in-person education alone for reducing decisional conflict and increasing completion of advance care plans (ACPs) among older adults with advanced CKD and their care-partners. Patients and patient-care-partner pairs will be surveyed at baseline for goals of care, life goals, health literacy, patient activation, end-of-life (EOL) preferences and baseline scores on other study outcome measures, and followed at 3- to 6-month intervals for up to 18 months, censoring at dialysis, death or study end, to collect data on decisional conflict and completion of advance directives as well as QOL, satisfaction, dyad concordance and medical events, such as dialysis initiation.

Conditions

See the medical conditions and disease areas that this research is targeting or investigating.

Chronic Kidney Diseases Kidney Failure, Chronic

Study Design

Understand how the trial is structured, including allocation methods, masking strategies, primary purpose, and other design elements.

Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

SUPPORTIVE_CARE

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

Review each arm or cohort in the study, along with the interventions and objectives associated with them.

Decision Aid for Renal Therapy

Usual Care as in the 'no intervention arm' below plus access to an web-based decision aid, the Decision Aid for Renal Therapy to patients and their care-partners

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Decision Aid for Renal Therapy

Intervention Type OTHER

DART is a web-based decision aid that informs older adults with advanced kidney disease of kidney disease treatment options and prompts them to consider their preferences and raise questions to discuss with their kidney disease providers.

Usual Care

In-person education as would be done at study sites plus 'Choosing a Treatment for Kidney Failure', an educational booklet published by the National Kidney Foundation

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Interventions

Learn about the drugs, procedures, or behavioral strategies being tested and how they are applied within this trial.

Decision Aid for Renal Therapy

DART is a web-based decision aid that informs older adults with advanced kidney disease of kidney disease treatment options and prompts them to consider their preferences and raise questions to discuss with their kidney disease providers.

Intervention Type OTHER

Eligibility Criteria

Check the participation requirements, including inclusion and exclusion rules, age limits, and whether healthy volunteers are accepted.

Inclusion Criteria

* CKD stages 4 or 5 (non-dialysis) without an established dialysis start or transplant date within three months of expected randomization;
* Age \>70 (with no upper limit);
* English speaking;
* Willingness to be randomized to DART; and
* Able to sign informed consent.

Exclusion Criteria

* death, dialysis initiation or transplant deemed highly likely within the next three months by the patient's nephrologist
Minimum Eligible Age

70 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

Meet the organizations funding or collaborating on the study and learn about their roles.

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

Tufts University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

Identify the individual or organization who holds primary responsibility for the study information submitted to regulators.

Keren Ladin

Associate Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

Learn about the lead researchers overseeing the trial and their institutional affiliations.

Daniel E Weiner, MD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Tufts Medical Center and Tufts University

Keren Ladin, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Tufts University

Locations

Explore where the study is taking place and check the recruitment status at each participating site.

University of California San Diego

San Diego, California, United States

Site Status

Northwestern University

Chicago, Illinois, United States

Site Status

Maine Medical Center

Portland, Maine, United States

Site Status

Tufts Medical Center

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Site Status

Countries

Review the countries where the study has at least one active or historical site.

United States

References

Explore related publications, articles, or registry entries linked to this study.

Gonzales KM, Koch-Weser S, Kennefick K, Lynch M, Porteny T, Tighiouart H, Wong JB, Isakova T, Rifkin DE, Gordon EJ, Rossi A, Weiner DE, Ladin K. Decision-Making Engagement Preferences among Older Adults with CKD. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2024 Jun 1;35(6):772-781. doi: 10.1681/ASN.0000000000000341. Epub 2024 Mar 22.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 38517479 (View on PubMed)

Ladin K, Tighiouart H, Bronzi O, Koch-Weser S, Wong JB, Levine S, Agarwal A, Ren L, Degnan J, Sewall LN, Kuramitsu B, Fox P, Gordon EJ, Isakova T, Rifkin D, Rossi A, Weiner DE. Effectiveness of an Intervention to Improve Decision Making for Older Patients With Advanced Chronic Kidney Disease : A Randomized Controlled Trial. Ann Intern Med. 2023 Jan;176(1):29-38. doi: 10.7326/M22-1543. Epub 2022 Dec 20.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 36534976 (View on PubMed)

Porteny T, Gonzales KM, Aufort KE, Levine S, Wong JB, Isakova T, Rifkin DE, Gordon EJ, Rossi A, Di Perna G, Koch-Weser S, Weiner DE, Ladin K; Stakeholder Advisory Board. Treatment Decision Making for Older Kidney Patients during COVID-19. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2022 Jul;17(7):957-965. doi: 10.2215/CJN.13241021. Epub 2022 Jun 7.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 35672037 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

Review additional registry numbers or institutional identifiers associated with this trial.

12890

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

More Related Trials

Additional clinical trials that may be relevant based on similarity analysis.

CKD Report Card Pilot Trial
NCT04119570 COMPLETED NA
Health Literacy Multi-media Study
NCT02999529 COMPLETED NA
Choice Sets for Advance Directives
NCT02209038 COMPLETED NA