- ICH GCP
- US Clinical Trials Registry
- Clinical Trial NCT01179867
Using Novel Canadian Resources to Improve Medication Reconciliation at Discharge
Study Overview
Status
Conditions
Intervention / Treatment
Detailed Description
Background:
- Drug-related illness accounts for 5-23% of hospital admissions, 4-8% of ambulatory visits, and is now claimed to be the 6th leading cause of mortality.
- At least 58% of adverse drug events (ADEs) are considered preventable.
- Transitions in care, particularly between community and hospital, account for a substantial number of preventable ADEs. In fact, between 12% to 17% of patients will have an adverse drug event within 30 days of discharge from hospital, and 14.3% will be readmitted.
- A major contributor to preventable ADEs is the failure to reconcile pre-admission medications with drugs prescribed at discharge. To avoid preventable ADEs, medication reconciliation is now a required organizational practice for hospital accreditation in Canada and the United States.
- However, there are substantial challenges in implementing medication reconciliation, as 87% of patients do not know what drugs they are taking, and 63% of the time staff cannot access outside records from the community pharmacy or primary care physician. As a result, 60-70% of medication histories contain at least one error.
- The time and resources required to obtain the community drug profile far outstrips the capacity to deliver this essential service for most patients.
Goal:
- Providing the medical team with the capacity to electronically retrieve the most up-to-date community drug list from all pharmacies will optimize the accuracy of medication histories and reduce the time required to reconcile the community and hospital drug lists at discharge.
- This strategy will also identify and advise the community pharmacies and physicians of the changes made during hospitalization, so that prescriptions for drugs that are discontinued because of adverse effects or ineffective treatment do not continue to be filled.
Preliminary work & novel opportunities:
- We established a "real-time" linkage to the Quebec health insurance agency (RAMQ) to test the benefits of accessing the complete drug profile in primary care. In a pilot test, we showed that the use of this linkage to retrieve community drug profiles at admission identified 2 additional drugs per patient, and reduced medication history-taking by 2.5 minutes per patient.
- There are unique opportunities to use existing drug insurance data to electronically access the community drug profile in Quebec. The province currently maintains comprehensive records of all dispensed medication for those insured through provincial drug program, providing information on 97.6% of medication used in the community.
Scientific objectives:
To determine if electronically facilitated reconciliation of community and hospital drugs at discharge and communication of treatment changes to the community-based prescribing physicians and pharmacists will reduce the risk of ADEs and re-admissions in the 30 days post-discharge.
Design:
A cluster randomized controlled trial will be used to evaluate the effects of electronic discharge reconciliation and communication on the occurrence of ADEs post-discharge. The study will be conducted at the McGill University Health Centre. We will stratify by medical and surgical unit, and then randomize the units into discharge medication reconciliation or usual care.
The discharge reconciliation intervention has three components:
- at admission, the community drug profile will be retrieved from RAMQ and the data will be transmitted to the hospital pharmacy information system;
- at discharge, the physician will use a community / hospital reconciliation module to write discharge prescriptions, discontinuation orders, and a rationale for all modified community medications;
- The updated medication list will be transmitted to the community-based prescribing physician(s), and dispensing pharmacy(ies) by fax.
Usual care typically includes a community drug history by the admission team when feasible, review by hospital pharmacist at the request of the treatment team, and manual reconciliation of community and hospital drug lists on the discharge prescription performed at the discretion of the discharging team.
The primary outcome will be ADEs, measured by follow-up interview 30 days post-discharge, and the secondary outcome-re-admission/ ER visit in 30 days, assessed by retrieving complete service utilization files from the RAMQ. Multivariate logistic regression will be used to assess the impact of discharge medication reconciliation. For both the primary and secondary outcome, we will assess whether adjustment for co-interventions and baseline differences between patients in the usual care and intervention arm confound the effect of the intervention. In a secondary analysis, we will assess whether the effect of the intervention is modified by hospital unit type (medicine versus surgery) or patient characteristics that are associated with a higher risk of adverse events (age, number of medications at discharge, number of medication changes at discharge) by including respective interaction terms in the logistic model and testing their significance using the Wald chi-square statistic.
Study Type
Enrollment (Actual)
Phase
- Not Applicable
Contacts and Locations
Study Locations
-
-
Quebec
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Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3A 1A3
- McGill University Health Centre
-
-
Participation Criteria
Eligibility Criteria
Ages Eligible for Study
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Genders Eligible for Study
Description
Inclusion Criteria:
- have public drug insurance: this includes all those 65 years and older in the province of Quebec, as well as those under 65 on social assistance or who do not have drug insurance available through their employer
- admitted to the hospital from the community
- admitted to a surgical or internal medicine unit
- discharged alive
Exclusion Criteria:
- none
Study Plan
How is the study designed?
Design Details
- Primary Purpose: PREVENTION
- Allocation: RANDOMIZED
- Interventional Model: PARALLEL
- Masking: SINGLE
Arms and Interventions
Participant Group / Arm |
Intervention / Treatment |
|---|---|
|
EXPERIMENTAL: Electronic Medication Reconciliation
Electronic medication reconciliation includes:
|
|
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NO_INTERVENTION: Usual practice medication reconciliation
Usual practice in dealing with medication reconciliation.
This includes viewing the hospital medications through the hospital electronic pharmacy system, and viewing the community drugs in the patient's chart, if it was collected at admission (not always the case).
However not all physicians view the community drugs before writing the discharge prescription.
The physician will write a paper discharge prescription to be given to the patient, but communications are generally not made directly to the community pharmacist or previous prescribing physicians.
|
What is the study measuring?
Primary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
|
Adverse drug event
Time Frame: Withing the 30 days post-discharge from hospital
|
Adverse drug event: an injury resulting from medical intervention related to a drug. Assessed using:
|
Withing the 30 days post-discharge from hospital
|
Secondary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
|
Emergency room visit / Hospital readmission
Time Frame: Within the 30 days post-discharge from hospital
|
All visits to the emergency room and/or hospital re-admission in the 30 days post-discharge will be measured using the provincial health insurance administrative databases.
This approach ensures that all ER visits and re-admissions are included, not just those occuring at the study hospitals.
Almost all hospital-based physicians in Quebec are remunerated on a fee-for-service basis, and are required to record accurately the treating establishment and location of service, as this information determines the level of remuneration.
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Within the 30 days post-discharge from hospital
|
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Failure to re-start community medications used for chronic conditions after discharge from hospital.
Time Frame: 90 days after discharge from hospital
|
Of all discharged patients who were on a medication used for a chronic condition in the community prior to their hospitalization, we will measure the proportion who do not re-start this medication within the 90 days after they are discharged from hospital.
This will be measured through comparison of their dispensed community medications before and after hospitalization (from administrative insurance database).
|
90 days after discharge from hospital
|
|
Readiness for hospital discharge
Time Frame: Within the 30 days post-discharge from hospital
|
This sub-study will examine the determinants and outcomes of patients' readiness for hospital discharge.
Specifically, it will determine if: a) patient and hospital organizational characteristics are associated with patients' readiness for hospital discharge, b) lower levels of patients' readiness for hospital discharge are associated with an increased risk of ADEs and re-admissions 30-day post-discharge and, c) the effects of the medication reconciliation intervention on ADEs and readmissions 30-day post discharge is modified by level of patient's readiness for hospital discharge.
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Within the 30 days post-discharge from hospital
|
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Time to complete medication history and discharge medication reconciliation with prescription.
Time Frame: At admission to study unit, and upon discharge from hospital
|
We will measure the time it takes clinicians to complete the patient's medication history at admission, which includes time spent speaking with patients about medications, contacting patients' pharmacies for information on patients' community medications, and documenting the community medication list.
We will also measure the time it takes clinicians to complete a medication reconciliation at discharge and write the discharge prescription.
We will compare the intervention and control groups, to see if the intervention reduces the time it takes clinicians to complete either of these two tasks.
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At admission to study unit, and upon discharge from hospital
|
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Therapy duplication
Time Frame: Withing the 30 days post-discharge from hospital
|
We will measure the frequency at which therapy duplications occur in the discharge prescription, comparing intervention with control units.
A therapy duplication will be defined as two or more drugs in the same therapeutic class being prescribed to the same patient.
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Withing the 30 days post-discharge from hospital
|
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Unplanned dose changes
Time Frame: Withing the 30 days post-discharge from hospital
|
We will measure the frequency at which unplanned dose changes occur in the discharge prescription, comparing intervention with control units.
An unplanned dose change will be defined as a change in dose from that at admission that was not documented as such in the discharge prescription.
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Withing the 30 days post-discharge from hospital
|
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Errors of omission
Time Frame: Withing the 30 days post-discharge from hospital
|
We will measure the frequency at which errors of omission occur in the discharge prescription, comparing intervention with control units.
An omission will be defined as a community medication (i.e.
dispensed in the 3 months prior to admission) that is not present on the discharge prescription.
|
Withing the 30 days post-discharge from hospital
|
Collaborators and Investigators
Sponsor
Collaborators
Publications and helpful links
General Publications
- Tamblyn R, Abrahamowicz M, Buckeridge DL, Bustillo M, Forster AJ, Girard N, Habib B, Hanley J, Huang A, Kurteva S, Lee TC, Meguerditchian AN, Moraga T, Motulsky A, Petrella L, Weir DL, Winslade N. Effect of an Electronic Medication Reconciliation Intervention on Adverse Drug Events: A Cluster Randomized Trial. JAMA Netw Open. 2019 Sep 4;2(9):e1910756. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.10756.
- Tamblyn R, Huang AR, Meguerditchian AN, Winslade NE, Rochefort C, Forster A, Eguale T, Buckeridge D, Jacques A, Naicker K, Reidel KE. Using novel Canadian resources to improve medication reconciliation at discharge: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial. Trials. 2012 Aug 27;13:150. doi: 10.1186/1745-6215-13-150.
Study record dates
Study Major Dates
Study Start
Primary Completion (ACTUAL)
Study Completion (ACTUAL)
Study Registration Dates
First Submitted
First Submitted That Met QC Criteria
First Posted (ESTIMATE)
Study Record Updates
Last Update Posted (ACTUAL)
Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria
Last Verified
More Information
Terms related to this study
Additional Relevant MeSH Terms
Other Study ID Numbers
- RN 0000086616 - 222163
This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.
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