Comprehensive Self-management Support for COPD Patients
NCT ID: NCT04533412
Last Updated: 2023-09-28
Study Results
Outcome measurements, participant flow, baseline characteristics, and adverse events have been published for this study.
View full resultsBasic Information
Get a concise snapshot of the trial, including recruitment status, study phase, enrollment targets, and key timeline milestones.
COMPLETED
NA
59 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-08-24
2022-04-28
Brief Summary
Review the sponsor-provided synopsis that highlights what the study is about and why it is being conducted.
Related Clinical Trials
Explore similar clinical trials based on study characteristics and research focus.
Comprehensive Patient-Centered Home-based Care Coaching for COPD Self-management
NCT06634810
COPD Resources, Education, and Activity Designed for You Study
NCT07125053
Optimizing Self-management COPD Treatment Through the American Lung Association Helpline
NCT05106257
A Digital Health Intervention to Promote Self-management in Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
NCT06850961
Development And Evaluation of An Adaptive Web-Based Intervention for COPD
NCT06770777
Detailed Description
Dive into the extended narrative that explains the scientific background, objectives, and procedures in greater depth.
The research team will randomize 58 COPD patients (29 per arm) to the SaMBA-COPD intervention or an attention control and follow them for 9 months to assess health and self-management behavior (SMB) outcomes.
Intervention:
Step 1: Outreach and Engagement. The project manager will notify the City Health Works (CHW) supervisor when an eligible and consented patient is randomized to receive care the intervention and will provide the patient's name and contact information. The CHW will call the patient within 7 days of consent to schedule a home visit. The CHW will encourage caregivers to join all meetings.
Step 2: Intake. The CHW will perform an intake interview that includes collection of basic information about the patient and their health and healthcare, including medications, intended to enable them to understand their health problems and provide them with chronic illness self-management support.
Step 3: Symptom assessment, medication adherence, and inhaler technique. The CHW will assess the patients' symptoms, adherence to medications, and check inhaler technique following a standardized protocol, and correct errors in inhaler use if identified.
Step 4: SMB barrier screening with the Screener. The CHWs will assess barriers to good SMB that lie within 4 domains: 1) social context, 2) physical health and functioning, 3) cognitive factors, and 4) psychological factors. To assess elements in each domain, the study team will use questions drawn from validated surveys used in the study team's research and in the SAMBA screening tool. Screening questions are a part of the study intervention, of which they consented to in the research consent. Examples of barriers follow:
1. Social context. Factors include adequacy of social support, financial and access concerns (costs, insurance, pharmacy convenience), language and literacy skills, coping with illness, alcohol and drug use, and use of culturally-rooted therapies like herbals and spiritual remedies.
2. Physical health and functioning. These include physical functioning and medication concerns (e.g., side effects, multiple medications).
3. Cognition. The CHW will screen for cognitive impairment with the validated Quick mild cognitive impairment screen (QMCI) because cognitive impairment may challenge their ability to perform SMB.
4. Psychology. Factors include depression and anxiety, and maladaptive beliefs about COPD and COPD medications.
Step 5: Addressing identified barriers. Each identified barrier links to a menu of actions for the patient and CHW to employ to resolve or work around it. Other actions may be identified by patient or CHW and pursued if desired. Wherever appropriate, the CHW will engage the patient's physicians and or a social worker to enact some of the action steps. Examples of barriers follow:
1. Social context barriers. Examples of actions include enrolling the patient in the New York State pharmaceutical assistance program to reduce drug costs or ask physicians to consider generic or formulary approved alternatives. If retrieving or renewing prescriptions is a problem, the CHW may pick up the medication or arrange delivery. The CHW can contact the physician to request a renewal if needed, and refer the patient to a social worker for assistance with home aid services, entitlements, insurance matters, and assistance when second hand smoke is a problem.
2. Physical health and functioning barriers. Examples include asking the physician to consider reducing medicines if the patient finds the regimen too burdensome, requesting occupational or physical therapy to address physical limitations, or engaging the social worker to arrange transportation.
3. Cognition barriers. The study team will specifically target memory but also use strategies to compensate based on type of impairment, including medication organization, slower-paced and explicit verbal instructions, use of tangible external aids, repetition and teach-back, use of plain language, and guided imagery to reduce cognitive load. Such strategies have been shown to improve SMB in low-literacy populations. The CHW may have more frequent encounters (in-person, phone) with memory impaired patients. Daily cell phone text reminders are another option that patients can select when memory problems impact regular medication use.
4. Psychological barriers. The CHW will notify the PCP if a participant voluntarily divulges any feelings of depression or anxiety. The PCP may evaluate and treat or refer to a mental health specialist.
COPD action plan and medication rescue pack. The study team will obtain consent from each patient's primary care provider to have a pharmacist counsel patients about rescue medications (oral steroids and antibiotics, "rescue pack") to be used in the event of an exacerbation of COPD. This consent will be obtained at the time of obtaining consent from the physician to recruit the patient for study participation. If the physician provides consent to recruit the patient but refuses consent to counsel the patient about the rescue pack, the patient will receive all intervention components with the exception of rescue pack counseling by a pharmacist.
For patients for whom the study team have consent from the PCP to provide counseling about the rescue pack, the CHW will suggest to the patient that they meet with the pharmacist. The meeting will be voluntary. For patients who agree, a referral will be made to the pharmacist and a visit scheduled, to take place in a clinical setting. The pharmacist will counsel the patient on the use of the rescue pack. If the patient agrees to receive a rescue pack, the pharmacist will place an order in the Epic electronic health record for the rescue pack medications, then pend and route the order to the patient's PCP. The PCP can choose to sign the order, cancel or delete it. The pharmacist will check to determine whether the prescription order was signed by the PCP. If it was not, the pharmacist will assume that the physician does not wish to provide the patient a rescue pack prescription. If the prescription order was signed by the physician, the pharmacist will contact the patient 7-10 days later to determine whether the patient picked up the medication and to ensure that the patient understands when and how to use the medications appropriately, and will notify the CHW that the patient received the medications. The CHW will discuss the use of the rescue pack medications with the patient at subsequent encounters to ensure that they continue to understand how to use them appropriately. Should the patient use the medications, the CHW, pharmacist, and or patient will notify the PCP, who will be encouraged to follow up with the patient.
Step 6: Home-Based Pulmonary Rehabilitation Protocol (HBPR). HBPR will be available to all patients who are able to ambulate with or without an assistive device (cane or walker), regardless of supplemental oxygen use. If the patient expresses interest in HBPR, the CHW will schedule the appointment and accompany the patient and caregiver (if available) to a clinical practice at the Mount Sinai Hospital. The patient will undergo a standard evaluation by a licensed respiratory therapist employed by Mount Sinai Hospital to develop the HBPR prescription. The evaluation will have two components, assessment of aerobic capacity using the 6-minute walk test (6MWT), and an assessment of muscular strength using elastic resistance bands. Target exercise intensity for HBPR will be set at 60-80% of the maximum work rate achieved during the 6MWT, a conservative goal intended to achieve benefit while minimizing risk of fatigue and shortness of breath. The therapist will select an appropriate band for home use for strength training exercises. During the evaluation, the respiratory therapist will monitor the patient's oxygen saturation, blood pressure, heart rate, and respiratory rate.
During the home visit that follows, the CHW will provide a timer, a pedometer to measure steps, an elastic resistance band, and an exercise diary. They may also provide the patient with an ergo cycle to enable them to conduct the aerobic exercises sitting down if walking is too burdensome or the patient is considered to be at high fall risk. The CHW and patient will consider the space available for exercise, such as a hallway, common space in the building (e.g., lobby, gathering room, etc.), outdoors during favorable weather, and local facilities like senior centers or churches. Once the area for exercise is selected, the CHW will demonstrate the walking and resistance training routines and observe the patient perform them on his/her own. The two will set a schedule for exercising and post the schedule and instructions prominently in the home.
Resistance training will consist of a simple routine of upper extremity extension and abduction movements with the elastic band. Each movement will be performed in 3 sets of 10 repetitions (15 minutes). The walking routine will last 20-40 minutes and the patient's pace will be guided by an audible click from the timer that is set by the CHW. The patient will be asked to perform the complete exercise routine 6 days a week. The CHW will directly supervise the patient multiple times over the 6-month intervention period. She will call periodically to support the patient when she is unable to visit.
The respiratory therapist will oversee the HBPR work of the CHW. This will include reviewing all cases in person or by phone every 7-14 days. Patients will be asked to reduce the intensity of exercise or rest for 5-10 minutes if they develop an uncomfortable level of shortness of breath or fatigue, and to stop exercising if they have symptoms that cause distress or discomfort and do not resolve after rest. Low literacy education methods will be used to ensure their understanding and retention of these instructions. The CHW will maintain communication with the therapist by HIPAA compliant secure email and telephone to report patient performance, trouble shoot problems, and to receive continuing education.
Step 7: Follow-up and Maintenance. The CHW will recommend that in-person meetings occur 1, 4, 8, and 12 weeks after intake and telephone follow-ups weekly through week 8 and monthly thereafter until month 6 when the intervention ends. Calls may be made more often to cognitively impaired patients to enhance information retention. Importantly, the patient and CHW will have the flexibility to tailor the number and frequency of encounters as they see fit. During follow up the CHW will assess patients' progress with SMB, their goals, and their symptoms.
Step 8: Graduation. SaMBA-COPD patients will receive a certificate upon program completion.
Conditions
See the medical conditions and disease areas that this research is targeting or investigating.
Study Design
Understand how the trial is structured, including allocation methods, masking strategies, primary purpose, and other design elements.
RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
The attention control is designed to isolate the impact of screening for self-management barriers. The attention control will consist of 4 visits by a COPD educator who will review a COPD education booklet.
Participants are randomized based on COPD Assessment Test (CAT) scores: CAT \<10 vs CAT \>10
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
DOUBLE
Study Groups
Review each arm or cohort in the study, along with the interventions and objectives associated with them.
Targeted self-management barrier support
Intervention group - Targeted self-management barrier support, home-based pulmonary rehabilitation, and emergency medication with community health workers
Self-management barrier support
For the intervention, community health workers will assess barriers to good self-management behaviors that lie within 4 domains: 1) social context, 2) physical health and functioning, 3) cognitive factors, and 4) psychological factors. They will work with participants for 6 months to help them work through their barriers to self-management of COPD. Participants can also participate in home-based pulmonary rehabilitation and can receive emergency pack/action pack medication for COPD exacerbations.
Guided COPD education
Control group - Guided COPD education with a COPD educator
Basic COPD Education
The attention control will consist of 4 visits by a COPD educator to the home to review the COPD education booklet. During the first visit, this COPD educator will review the COPD 1-2-3 booklet in its entirety with the patient. During visits 2 and 3, the COPD educator will make a visit to "check in" with the patient, ask how they are doing with their respiratory symptoms, and review any sections of the COPD 1-2-3 booklet the patient chooses. The COPD educator will recommend visits every 2 months but the patient and COPD educator may choose to modify the interval as needed. If the patient appears to be experiencing worsening respiratory symptoms during any visit, the COPD educator will notify the patient's physician.
Interventions
Learn about the drugs, procedures, or behavioral strategies being tested and how they are applied within this trial.
Self-management barrier support
For the intervention, community health workers will assess barriers to good self-management behaviors that lie within 4 domains: 1) social context, 2) physical health and functioning, 3) cognitive factors, and 4) psychological factors. They will work with participants for 6 months to help them work through their barriers to self-management of COPD. Participants can also participate in home-based pulmonary rehabilitation and can receive emergency pack/action pack medication for COPD exacerbations.
Basic COPD Education
The attention control will consist of 4 visits by a COPD educator to the home to review the COPD education booklet. During the first visit, this COPD educator will review the COPD 1-2-3 booklet in its entirety with the patient. During visits 2 and 3, the COPD educator will make a visit to "check in" with the patient, ask how they are doing with their respiratory symptoms, and review any sections of the COPD 1-2-3 booklet the patient chooses. The COPD educator will recommend visits every 2 months but the patient and COPD educator may choose to modify the interval as needed. If the patient appears to be experiencing worsening respiratory symptoms during any visit, the COPD educator will notify the patient's physician.
Eligibility Criteria
Check the participation requirements, including inclusion and exclusion rules, age limits, and whether healthy volunteers are accepted.
Inclusion Criteria
* Chart-document severe or very severe COPD (FEV1\<50% predicted) or COPD-related ED/hospitalization ≥ 1 visit within the past 12 months
* Prescribed any daily medication for COPD, English or Spanish speaking, Smoking history ≥ 10 pack-years
Exclusion Criteria
40 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
Meet the organizations funding or collaborating on the study and learn about their roles.
City Health Works
OTHER
Northwestern University
OTHER
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
NIH
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
OTHER
Responsible Party
Identify the individual or organization who holds primary responsibility for the study information submitted to regulators.
Alex D Federman
Director of Research
Locations
Explore where the study is taking place and check the recruitment status at each participating site.
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
New York, New York, United States
Countries
Review the countries where the study has at least one active or historical site.
References
Explore related publications, articles, or registry entries linked to this study.
Federman AD, Barry M, Moas E, Davenport C, McGeough C, Tejeda M, Rivera L, Gutierrez S, Mejias H, Belton D, Mathew C, Lindenauer PK, McDermott D, O'Conor R, Wolf MS, Wisnivesky JP. Protocol for a feasibility randomized trial of self-management support for people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease using lay health coaches. Contemp Clin Trials. 2021 Nov;110:106570. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2021.106570. Epub 2021 Sep 21.
Poot CC, Meijer E, Kruis AL, Smidt N, Chavannes NH, Honkoop PJ. Integrated disease management interventions for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Sep 8;9(9):CD009437. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009437.pub3.
Cox NS, Dal Corso S, Hansen H, McDonald CF, Hill CJ, Zanaboni P, Alison JA, O'Halloran P, Macdonald H, Holland AE. Telerehabilitation for chronic respiratory disease. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Jan 29;1(1):CD013040. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013040.pub2.
Provided Documents
Download supplemental materials such as informed consent forms, study protocols, or participant manuals.
Document Type: Study Protocol
Document Type: Statistical Analysis Plan
Document Type: Informed Consent Form
Other Identifiers
Review additional registry numbers or institutional identifiers associated with this trial.
GCO 17-2407
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
More Related Trials
Additional clinical trials that may be relevant based on similarity analysis.