Honoring Individual Goals and Hopes: Implementing Advance Care Planning for Persons With Kidney Disease on Dialysis
NCT ID: NCT05324878
Last Updated: 2024-11-20
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
55 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2021-09-01
2024-07-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Aims:
1. Implement the HIGHway intervention with a project team consisting of a social worker, nephrologist and nurse at 50 clinics, and train them to conduct ACP using best practices.
2. Assist social workers/nurses to implement ACP into their regular workflow with personal coaching, webinars and multimedia teaching materials.
3. Use a dedicated web-based application software to guide social workers/nurses on the ACP process of patients in dialysis centers and provide resources for holding ACP conversations.
4. Provide ongoing coaching through monthly teleconferences to bolster social worker/nurse skills through case discussion and mentoring.
5. Develop a long-term implementation and scale-up plan for training social workers/nurses in ACP in different dialysis centers in conjunction with the Coalition for Supportive Care of Kidney Patients, Forum of ESRD Networks, the National Council of Nephrology Social Workers, the National Renal Administrators Association, and dialysis organizations.
RELEVANT BACKGROUND Patient-centered care problem addressed: Patients on dialysis want to discuss their preferences for treatment at the end of life, but few do so, and most nephrologists are reluctant or feel unprepared to lead such discussions. Effective tools are critically needed to elicit such preferences since over 50,000 Americans die of kidney disease annually, more than from breast or prostate cancer. For dialysis patients with significant co-morbidities, risk of death within a year of starting dialysis is stark. Of those who had 4 or more comorbidities, 26% died within 30 days of dialysis initiation, and 60% died within a year. These patients have higher - and often unwanted - intensity of care at end of life; in a four-year study of the United States Renal Data System, 49% of elderly long-term hemodialysis (HD) patients spent time in an intensive care unit in their final month of life, compared with 24% of cancer patients. Meaningful end-of-life conversations can change these outcomes and are associated with increased hospice referral, less aggressive and expensive medical treatment, and higher levels of family satisfaction. Yet less than 10% of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients report having a conversation about any end-of-life issues with their nephrologist in the previous year, although 90% said such conversations were important. Few patients with ESRD engage in ACP, and the vast majority lack a written advance directive or surrogate decision maker, leaving them unprepared to provide guidance in medical decisions in a crisis.
A prior study funded by PCORI developed and tested an intervention to enable more advance care planning to take place in dialysis centers. The Shared Decision Making - Renal Supportive Care (SDM-RSC) study tested a multi-modal patient-centered intervention to improve advance care planning for dialysis patients. Through qualitative interviews with advisory boards comprised of patients and stakeholders, SDM-RSC investigators designed an intervention that focused on goals of care conversations between patients and family members with the nephrologist and social worker. The SDM-RSC intervention targeted deficiencies in communication, estimating prognosis, and transition planning for seriously ill dialysis patients. The intervention showed capacity to increase substantially completion of advance directives and medical orders (Medical Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment \[MOLST\]/Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment \[POLST\]) associated with improved patient-level end-of-life (EOL) outcomes. Among study participants, the advance directive completion rate and understanding of advance directives were substantially higher than in usual care; 75% of participants named and documented a healthcare proxy and 63% had medical orders (MOLST or POLST) (in comparison to 49% with advance directives and 3% with medical orders in usual care). The average duration time for an ACP conversation was about 45 minutes. Overall clinic-level hospice usage using retrospective data did not vary significantly between the pre- and post-intervention 6-month periods with an observed average rate of 25% which is close to the 2015 national average of 26% among all ESRD Medicare decedents. However, among deceased study participants who engaged in a Shared Decision Making and Renal Supportive Care (SDMRSC) meeting, 48% voluntarily withdrew from dialysis prior to death and 39% received hospice services (compared to the overall rate in these dialysis centers of 24.8%).
There were high levels of family satisfaction (FAMCARE results) and no adverse intervention effects on patients or surrogates on measures of depression and health-related quality of life. The stakeholder advisory council and the respondents on post-intervention interviews recommended the following: a) streamlining and focusing the social worker training; b) offering the advance care planning conversation to all dialysis patients, not just those who were seriously ill, c) broadening the population to include home dialysis patients; and d) offering a telehealth option for conducting the discussions.
The current study builds on the SDM-RSC results to implement the revised intervention in a broader population with a larger number of participating dialysis centers.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Population 1: Social workers/Nurses
Social workers and nurses working at participating dialysis centers. Dialysis centers will be selected based on demographic data of the center (urbanicity, population served, size of center, patients treated, etc) to provide for diversity of centers participating.
Training
Social workers/nurses participants are agreeing to participating in the training program (3 sessions of 2 hours over a period of six weeks - one session every 2 weeks), follow up training sessions (occurring monthly), mentorship calls with social worker faculty on the project team, recording one conversation between social worker and a patient for quality improvement purposes, and completing evaluation of the project interventions (5-minute questionnaire after each education session, 15-minute questionnaire at end of participation in project).
Population 2a: Patients receiving care at the dialysis center
2a. When an advance care planning conversation takes place, social worker/nurse will provide patient with an informational flyer about the HIGHway project and a postcard.
No interventions assigned to this group
Population 2b: Patients receiving care at the dialysis center
2b. Social worker/nurse will identify one patient willing to have a recording made of advance care planning conversation between social worker/nurse and patient.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Training
Social workers/nurses participants are agreeing to participating in the training program (3 sessions of 2 hours over a period of six weeks - one session every 2 weeks), follow up training sessions (occurring monthly), mentorship calls with social worker faculty on the project team, recording one conversation between social worker and a patient for quality improvement purposes, and completing evaluation of the project interventions (5-minute questionnaire after each education session, 15-minute questionnaire at end of participation in project).
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Social worker, nurse and patients must speak, read and write English.
* All participants must be 18 y old.
* Social workers and nurses Commitment to attend initial 6-h training and booster sessions.
Exclusion Criteria
* Unable to speak, read and write English
18 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Medical Technology and Practice Patterns Institute
UNKNOWN
Western Carolina University
OTHER
University of New Mexico
OTHER
George Washington University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Dale Lupu, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
George Washington University
Locations
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DaVita World Headquarters
Denver, Colorado, United States
American Renal Associates LLC Corporate Office
Beverly, Massachusetts, United States
Fresenius Medical Care Corporate Headquarters
Waltham, Massachusetts, United States
Countries
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References
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Rodriguez de Sosa GM, Thamer M, Anderson E, Unruh ML, Lupu DE. Patient-Centered Advance Care Planning in Dialysis: The HIGHWay (Honor Individual Goals and Hopes Way) Initiative. Kidney360. 2025 Apr 25;6(6):957-967. doi: 10.34067/KID.0000000767.
Rodriguez de Sosa G, Nicklas A, Thamer M, Anderson E, Reddy N, Stevelos J, Germain MJ, Unruh ML, Lupu DE. Implementing Advance Care Planning for dialysis patients: HIGHway project. BMC Palliat Care. 2022 Jul 16;21(1):129. doi: 10.1186/s12904-022-01011-5.
Related Links
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PCORI Website Project Page
Other Identifiers
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DI-2020C2-20362
Identifier Type: OTHER_GRANT
Identifier Source: secondary_id
NCR213481
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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