Improving Medication Safety for Kidney Disease with a Digital Drug Dosing Tool in Nova Scotia Community Pharmacy Practice.
NCT ID: NCT06820372
Last Updated: 2025-02-11
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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NOT_YET_RECRUITING
125 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2025-06-01
2026-05-01
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is categorized by a sustained reduction of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) of less than 60 ml/min/1.73m2 . The prevalence of CKD in Canada is approximately 12.5 %, representing nearly 3 million adults . In Canadian primary care practices, the prevalence of CKD is 71.9 per 1000 individuals and is highest in rural settings compared to urban settings . Multiple comorbidities, advanced age, and polypharmacy are common in CKD . Many drugs are primarily eliminated by the kidneys and inappropriate dosing can lead to drug accumulation. Considering these factors, the risk for adverse drug events and further harm to kidney function is high in this population .
CKD patients are often exposed to inappropriately prescribed medications which lead to adverse outcomes . In Canada, adverse drug reactions resulting in emergency room visits or hospitalization carry a significant economic burden to the system and health impacts to the individual. A recent Canadian primary care resource outlined key medications to be dose-adjusted or avoided with CKD. The Nova Scotia Health Renal Program published a support tool for primary care providers which included medications to avoid and common drugs requiring renal dose adjustment in those with CKD. Despite the development of these resources, a recent primary care study involving advanced CKD (eGFR less than 60 ml/min/1.73m2) patients in Nova Scotia, found that nearly 20% of high-risk medications that should be dose-adjusted or avoided were not . A possible drawback of these resources is they lack practical suggestions on specific dosing or how to stop a medication, necessary monitoring, appropriate alternatives considering drug coverage or ideal prescribing to protect or preserve kidney function.
Limited progress has unfortunately been made in the past twelve years since the Canadian pharmacotherapy assessment in chronic renal disease (PAIR) instrument revealed that 21% of drug therapy problems in community pharmacy were related to inappropriate use or use of a contraindicated medication . Further, the Canadian Institute for Health information in 2021-2022 reported potentially inappropriate medication prescribing in seniors with rates that were nearly 15% higher in Nova Scotia compared to Canada . This research aims to address the medication prescribing gap that is acute in Nova Scotia through an innovative solution to optimize the resources and capacity of community pharmacists while ensuring safety and quality of medication prescribing in those with CKD.
Cultivating Excellence on the Frontline: Considering the Role of Primary Care Community Pharmacists
According to a recent national survey, more than one in five Canadians do not have a primary care provider. In Atlantic Canada, the proportion of individuals without a prescriber (31%) was more than double that of Ontario (13%). In February of 2023, approximately 135, 000 Nova Scotians were without a primary care provider. Benefits of community pharmacists as prescribers have been highlighted particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. Pharmacists' scope of practice in Nova Scotia has expanded to enable community pharmacists to prescribe adaptations (e.g., modify a dose or regimen) or prescribe a medication for a chronic disease including diabetes, asthma, and heart disease but not CKD unless associated with diabetes. Community pharmacists commonly see individuals with CKD. Interviews of Nova Scotia pharmacists recently revealed barriers to assessing kidney function, medication dosing and prescribing in CKD. These pharmacists emphasized the need to develop a collaborative, evidence and expert-informed drug dosing and decision support tool to optimize prescribing in the CKD population. Another study noted that prescribing by Nova Scotia community pharmacists significantly increased when a diagnosis was supported by a protocol . This finding was also identified in another survey of community pharmacists in Ontario. Nova Scotia is recognized as a national leader in enabling full scope of pharmacy practice. Community pharmacist prescribers are in an ideal position to support the safe use of medications needed to protect and preserve kidney function in individuals with CKD. While electronic tools for patients, hospital drug order entry technologies and a general ambulatory clinical pathway for managing CKD in another province have been developed to improve care of CKD patients, tools to optimize prescribing in patients with CKD are absent from the literature. Having a tool to support Nova Scotian community pharmacists could mitigate inappropriate drug exposure and harm or preserve kidney function through appropriate prescribing. This research will enable the pharmacist's full scope of practice as a prescriber in caring for individuals with CKD in Nova Scotia.
This research will use different ways to see how the digital dosing tool works at participating pharmacy locations, like checking how many people use it, how well it helps adjust doses, and asking patients for feedback. We'll follow a method called RE-AIM, which looks at how many people are reached, how well the tool works, how easy it is for people to use, how it's put into practice, and if it continues to be used over time.
Conditions
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Study Design
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OTHER
PROSPECTIVE
Interventions
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Electronic Drug Dosing and Decision Support Kidney (eDoseCKD) Tool
Thirty evidence, expert informed and validated computerized drug decision support algorithms of high risk medications will be utilized by community pharmacists for individuals with an eGFR \< 60 ml/min who are on one of the 30 target algorithms. The will be followed up to 3 months to assess effectivess, safety and whether the dose change was maintained.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* receiving at least 1 tool target medication
Exclusion Criteria
* unable to provide informed consent
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Nova Scotia Health Authority
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Jo-Anne Wilson
Associate Professor, Pharmacy, Faculty of Health, College of Pharmacy, Dalhousie University; Scientific Affiliate, Nova Scotia Health Research and Innovation, Associate Scientist, MSSU
Central Contacts
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References
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Tran J, Shaffelburg C, Phelan E, Neville H, Lively A, Poyah P, Tennankore K, More K, Soroka S, Harpell D, Wilson JA. Community pharmacists' perspectives on assessing kidney function and medication dosing for patients with advanced chronic kidney disease: A qualitative study using the theoretical domains framework. Can Pharm J (Ott). 2023 Jul 7;156(5):272-281. doi: 10.1177/17151635231176530. eCollection 2023 Sep-Oct.
Wilson JA, Ratajczak N, Halliday K, Battistella M, Naylor H, Sheffield M, Marin JG, Pitman J, Kennie-Kaulbach N, Trenaman S, Gillis L. Medications for community pharmacists to dose adjust or avoid to enhance prescribing safety in individuals with advanced chronic kidney disease: a scoping review and modified Delphi. BMC Nephrol. 2024 Oct 29;25(1):386. doi: 10.1186/s12882-024-03829-y.
Other Identifiers
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Nova Scotia Health Authority
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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