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
Get a concise snapshot of the trial, including recruitment status, study phase, enrollment targets, and key timeline milestones.
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
NA
206 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-09-09
2026-03-31
Brief Summary
Review the sponsor-provided synopsis that highlights what the study is about and why it is being conducted.
No transplant programs have integrated APOL1 testing into LD evaluation in a culturally competent manner. Clinical "chatbots," mobile apps that use artificial intelligence to provide genetic information to patients and relieve constraints on clinicians' time, can improve informed treatment decisions and reduce decisional conflict. The chatbot "Gia," created by a medical genetics company, can be adapted to any condition. However, no chatbot on APOL1 is currently available. No counseling training programs are available for nephrologists to counsel AA LDs about APOL1 and donation in a culturally competent manner. Given the shortage of genetic counselors, increasing nephrologists' genetic literacy is critical to integrating genetic testing into practice.
The objective of this study is to culturally adapt and evaluate the effectiveness of an APOL1 testing program for AA LDs at two transplant centers serving large AA LD populations (Chicago, IL, and Washington, DC). The APOL1 testing program will evaluate the effect of the culturally competent testing, chatbot, and counseling on AA LD candidates' decisional conflict about donating, preparedness for decision-making, willingness to donate, and satisfaction with informed consent. The specific aims are to:
1. Adapt Gia and transplant counseling to APOL1 for use in routine clinical practice
2. Evaluate the effectiveness of this intervention on decisional conflict, preparedness, and willingness to donate in a pre-post design
3. Evaluate the implementation of this intervention into clinical practice by using the RE-AIM framework to longitudinally evaluate nephrologist counseling practices and LDs' satisfaction with informed consent.
The impact of this study will be the creation of a model for APOL1 testing of AA LDs, which can then be implemented nationally via implementation science approaches. APOL1 will serve as a model for integrating culturally competent genetic testing into transplant and other practices to improve patient informed consent.
Related Clinical Trials
Explore similar clinical trials based on study characteristics and research focus.
APOL1 Genetic Testing Program for Living Donors, Part 2
NCT04999436
Role of Donor Genetics and Recipient Genetics in Kidney Transplant Outcomes
NCT01143532
Evaluation of APOL1 Gene Variants in Kidney Donors and Their Impact on Long-term Renal Function in Donors and Recipients
NCT06116721
APOL1 Long-term Kidney Transplantation Outcomes Network (APOLLO)
NCT03615235
Reducing Disparities in Living Donor Transplant Among African Americans
NCT03819686
Detailed Description
Dive into the extended narrative that explains the scientific background, objectives, and procedures in greater depth.
Using a hybrid effectiveness-implementation design, this study will simultaneously evaluate the effectiveness and implementation of the APOL1 testing program to more efficiently translate evidence into practice, as service delivery system factors for adoption and scale up are considered while effectiveness is tested. The study will be conducted at two geographically distinct transplant programs: Northwestern University in Chicago, IL, and Georgetown University in Washington, DC.
Participants include live kidney donor candidates of African ancestry undergoing donor evaluation. The investigators will recruit potential participants consecutively; with participants recruited in year 1 serving as the control group, and participants recruited in years 2-5 serving as the intervention group. Participants will be eligible for participation if they respond positively to one of three questions assessing African ancestry. Participants in the intervention group will use the chatbot for 5-7 minutes. Immediately thereafter, research staff will ask for participants' informed consent to undergo APOL1 genetic testing; those who agree will provide a saliva sample for testing. APOL1 test results will be integrated into the respective transplant program's electronic health records. Thereafter, transplant nephrologists will engage in a counseling discussion with donor candidates about APOL1 and living donation.
Distributional assumptions will be assessed to evaluate appropriateness of model specifications. For primary analyses, the mixed model framework will allow for incorporation of a random center effect to separate within- and between-center variance estimates. As participants will not be randomized to intervention arms, the proposed statistical analysis plan will also incorporate a multivariable modeling approach, with inclusion of potential confounders, to reduce bias in intervention effect estimates. Effect estimates will be reported with confidence intervals to convey variability in estimates.
Methods for sample size estimates were based on a simplified comparisons of means between the two arms (pre-post implementation periods). Necessary sample sizes were then inflated to account for multivariable model and to account for loss-to-follow-up, to ensure adequate power. The proposed sample size of 74 participants in the control period and 316 in the intervention period will provide at least 80-90% power to detect meaningful differences in mean Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS) score ranging from 5.0 to 7.7 units.
The impact of this study will be the creation of a model for integrating genetic testing into clinical practice that shows how to scale up genetic counseling services through the use of chatbots to deliver foundational information, and training nephrologists to deliver components of genetic counseling. Specifically, this model will demonstrate how to deliver APOL1 testing of live donor candidates, which can then be implemented across the country via implementation science approaches. The proposed study will prepare transplant programs to deliver culturally competent counseling coterminous with the completion of the NIH APOLLO study in \~5 years. The findings generated from this research have the potential to protect donor candidates' safety by improving their informed consent. As such, this proposal is timely and responsive to the NIDDK Program Announcement (PA-18-330) "Investigator-Initiated Clinical Trials Targeting Diseases within the Mission of NIDDK."
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.
NON_RANDOMIZED
SEQUENTIAL
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
NONE
Study Groups
Review each arm or cohort in the study, along with the interventions and objectives associated with them.
Control Arm
No intervention will be administered. Usual care will be administered.
No interventions assigned to this group
Intervention Arm
APOL1 testing program
Components of Genetic Counseling
The APOL1 testing program is designed to help living donor candidates to reduce their decisional conflict and enhance their informed consent regarding living donation. This intervention component entails: (1) an artificial intelligence-based conversational agent "chatbot" providing foundational information about the relationship between APOL1 and kidney disease and living donor outcomes, and APOL1 testing. The chatbot helps to relieve the workload on clinicians and scale up information giving. (2) The transplant nephrologist counseling component includes discussion about the APOL1 test results and shared decision making about donation, in a culturally competent manner, so as to enhance donor candidates' informed consent for living donation.
APOL1 genetic testing
APOL1 genetic testing will be performed while live kidney donor candidates are undergoing donor evaluation to identify whether they are at elevated risk of kidney disease post-donation. This risk information is expected to better enable donor candidates to make meaningful informed decisions about donating.
EHR integration
APOL1 genetic test results will be integrated into the electronic health record to provide clinical decision support to transplant nephrologists in evaluating donor candidates.
Interventions
Learn about the drugs, procedures, or behavioral strategies being tested and how they are applied within this trial.
Components of Genetic Counseling
The APOL1 testing program is designed to help living donor candidates to reduce their decisional conflict and enhance their informed consent regarding living donation. This intervention component entails: (1) an artificial intelligence-based conversational agent "chatbot" providing foundational information about the relationship between APOL1 and kidney disease and living donor outcomes, and APOL1 testing. The chatbot helps to relieve the workload on clinicians and scale up information giving. (2) The transplant nephrologist counseling component includes discussion about the APOL1 test results and shared decision making about donation, in a culturally competent manner, so as to enhance donor candidates' informed consent for living donation.
APOL1 genetic testing
APOL1 genetic testing will be performed while live kidney donor candidates are undergoing donor evaluation to identify whether they are at elevated risk of kidney disease post-donation. This risk information is expected to better enable donor candidates to make meaningful informed decisions about donating.
EHR integration
APOL1 genetic test results will be integrated into the electronic health record to provide clinical decision support to transplant nephrologists in evaluating donor candidates.
Eligibility Criteria
Check the participation requirements, including inclusion and exclusion rules, age limits, and whether healthy volunteers are accepted.
Inclusion Criteria
* Living kidney donor candidates may be directed or non-directed donors
* Adults (ages 18+)
* English-speaking
* Cognitively intact individuals
* All genders
Exclusion Criteria
* Only African Americans and people of African ancestry will be included because APOL1 risk variants are predominantly found in African Americans and people who have African ancestry.
* Pregnant women cannot be living kidney donors
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
Meet the organizations funding or collaborating on the study and learn about their roles.
Georgetown University
OTHER
Northwestern University
OTHER
Responsible Party
Identify the individual or organization who holds primary responsibility for the study information submitted to regulators.
Elisa Gordon
Professor
Principal Investigators
Learn about the lead researchers overseeing the trial and their institutional affiliations.
Elisa J Gordon
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Northwestern University
Locations
Explore where the study is taking place and check the recruitment status at each participating site.
Medstar Georgetown Transplant Institute
Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
Chicago, Illinois, 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.
Smith JD, Agrawal A, Wicklund C, Duquette D, Friedewald J, Rasmussen LV, Gacki-Smith J, Tandon SD, Muhammad LN, Yancy CW, Dong S, Cooper M, Gilbert A, Shetty A, Gordon EJ. Implementation of a culturally competent APOL1 genetic testing programme into living donor evaluation: A two-site, non-randomised, pre-post trial design. BMJ Open. 2023 May 15;13(5):e067657. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-067657.
Other Identifiers
Review additional registry numbers or institutional identifiers associated with this trial.
More Related Trials
Additional clinical trials that may be relevant based on similarity analysis.