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Effectiveness of SMS-text Message Support for Patients With Hypertension to Improve Blood Pressure (*StAR)

2014년 11월 10일 업데이트: University of Oxford

SMS-text Adherence Support (StAR*) Study, a Randomized Three-arm Open Parallel Group Trial to Evaluate the Effects of a Structured Programme of Hypertension Treatment Adherence Support Delivered Remotely Through SMS-text Messages on Blood Pressure at 12 Months as Compared With Usual Care.

General synopsis for SMS-text Adherence Support (*StAR) Study and associated preparatory and pilot work

Background: High blood pressure is an important risk factor for heart disease, stroke and chronic kidney disease. Clear evidence exists that for individuals with high blood pressure (hypertension) lowering blood pressure really reduces this risk. One of the critical factors in the long term control of blood pressure is the regular use of effective antihypertensive medications. In South Africa, poor treatment adherence (attending clinic, re-filling prescriptions, and regularly taking hypertension tablets) is known to be an important and alterable risk factor for uncontrolled high blood pressure and its complications (heart disease, stroke and chronic kidney disease). SMS-text messages have been shown to improve clinic attendance and medication adherence for some diseases (like HIV and TB) in other low-resource settings. It is not clear whether SMS-text messages to support treatment adherence have an effect on long-term blood pressure control. The acceptability, sustainability and scalability such technology also remains to be determined.

Aim: To investigate if a system of SMS-text messages to support treatment adherence is more effective than usual care for controlling high blood-pressure.

Objectives: The main objective is to test whether advice and support given by SMS-text, either by providing information (informational) or by allowing a two-way communication (interactive) improves control of blood pressure at one year compared to usual care.

Additional objectives include assessing whether the interventions have an effect on,

  • Clinic attendance
  • Prescription refill adherence
  • Self-reported medication adherence
  • Hypertension related illness or death
  • Patient empowerment

Study design: Single centre randomized three-arm parallel group trial As it is not clear how best to support treatment adherence for people with hypertension we need to compare the different ways this might be done. Eligible patients who provide written consent will be put into one of three groups and then compared. The groups are selected by a computer which has no information about the individual (i.e. by chance). Participants in each group will get different types of SMS-text messages and these are compared.

Study interventions:

  • Enhanced usual care In addition to their usual clinical care participants will receive the pre-randomisation "Welcome to the *StAR Study" SMS-text, a "Happy Birthday" SMS-text on their date of birth and up to six additional SMS-text messages containing study specific information and thanking the participant for taking part in the study.
  • Informational SMS-text messages In addition to enhanced usual care, participants allocated to the informational SMS-text support group will receive semi-tailored structured adherence-support (including clinic appointment and medication pick-up reminders, medication adherence support and hypertension-related education.)
  • Interactive SMS-text messages In addition to enhanced usual care and informational SMS-text messages, SMS-text messages sent to participants in the interactive SMS-text group will contain a "prompt to respond" which will guide participants to additional SMS-text based resources.

Outcome measures: The main outcome measure is mean blood pressure measured at one year. Additional outcomes include the proportion of participants with "controlled blood pressure" as well as measures of clinic attendance, prescription refill adherence, self-reported medication adherence, hypertension related illness or death, and patient empowerment.

연구 개요

상세 설명

General synopsis for SMS-text Adherence Support (*StAR) Study and associated preparatory and pilot work

Background: High blood pressure is an important risk factor for heart disease, stroke and chronic kidney disease. Clear evidence exists that for individuals with high blood pressure (hypertension) lowering blood pressure really reduces this risk. One of the critical factors in the long term control of blood pressure is the regular use of effective antihypertensive medications. In South Africa, poor treatment adherence (attending clinic, re-filling prescriptions, and regularly taking hypertension tablets) is known to be an important and alterable risk factor for uncontrolled high blood pressure and its complications (heart disease, stroke and chronic kidney disease). SMS-text messages have been shown to improve clinic attendance and medication adherence for some diseases (like HIV and TB) in other low-resource settings. It is not clear whether SMS-text messages to support treatment adherence have an effect on long-term blood pressure control. The acceptability, sustainability and scalability such technology also remains to be determined.

Aim: To investigate if a system of SMS-text messages to support treatment adherence is more effective than usual care for controlling high blood-pressure.

Objectives: The main objective is to test whether advice and support given by SMS-text, either by providing information (informational) or by allowing a two-way communication (interactive) improves control of blood pressure at one year compared to usual care.

Additional objectives include assessing whether the interventions have an effect on,

  • Clinic attendance
  • Prescription refill adherence
  • Self-reported medication adherence
  • Hypertension related illness or death
  • Patient empowerment

Study design: Single centre randomized three-arm parallel group trial As it is not clear how best to support treatment adherence for people with hypertension we need to compare the different ways this might be done. Eligible patients who provide written consent will be put into one of three groups and then compared. The groups are selected by a computer which has no information about the individual (i.e. by chance). Participants in each group will get different types of SMS-text messages and these are compared.

Study interventions:

  • Enhanced usual care In addition to their usual clinical care participants will receive the pre-randomisation "Welcome to the *StAR Study" SMS-text, a "Happy Birthday" SMS-text on their date of birth and up to six additional SMS-text messages containing study specific information and thanking the participant for taking part in the study.
  • Informational SMS-text messages In addition to enhanced usual care, participants allocated to the informational SMS-text support group will receive semi-tailored structured adherence-support (including clinic appointment and medication pick-up reminders, medication adherence support and hypertension-related education.)
  • Interactive SMS-text messages In addition to enhanced usual care and informational SMS-text messages, SMS-text messages sent to participants in the interactive SMS-text group will contain a "prompt to respond" which will guide participants to additional SMS-text based resources.

Outcome measures: The main outcome measure is mean blood pressure measured at one year. Additional outcomes include the proportion of participants with "controlled blood pressure" as well as measures of clinic attendance, prescription refill adherence, self-reported medication adherence, hypertension related illness or death, and patient empowerment.

Participant recruitment:

Posters advertising the study and leaflets containing study information will be available in the general waiting areas of the health centre. Adult patients attending the medical outpatients department or one of the chronic disease clubs will be approached and invited to consider taking part in the study. Interested individuals will have the opportunity to ask trained research staff questions about the study and their participation. Information about the study will be available in English, isi-Xhosa, and Afrikaans. Individuals interested in participating will be asked a series of screening questions to assess their eligibility for inclusion in the study and will have their blood pressure measured as per the study protocol. Eligible participants who decline to participate will be asked for permission to access their clinical record to extract basic details (age, gender, medication, recent blood pressure). Copies of Participant Information Leaflets and posters in English can be found in Appendix B. Translated copies are available upon request.

Informed consent procedures:

Eligible individuals who agree to participate will be asked to complete a consent form. A copy of the completed form will be given to participants as part of their trial information pack. Copies of consent to participate forms in English can be found in Appendix B. Translated copies are available upon request.

Study assessments:

  • Baseline We will ask standard questions about health and medical history, and measure blood pressure, weight and height. Any necessary blood tests will be done as per clinic protocols. A trained research assistant will review participant's clinical records.
  • 6 months Participant contact details (particularly participant's primary mobile-telephone number) will be checked and if necessary up-dated and blood pressure will be measured.
  • 12 months A trained research assistant will administer a final set of questionnaires, measure participant's blood pressure according to the trial protocol, and repeat basic clinical measurements including anthropometry. Clinical records will be reviewed to capture intervening clinical events and changes in medical management. Participants who do not attend the 12 month follow-up clinic appointment will be followed up, and if cause for non-attendance is hospital admission or death, then hospital records or death certificate data will be obtained.

End of the study:

The end of study is the date of the final 12-month follow-up clinic visit of the last participant. After this time study participants will be asked if they would like to receive SMS-text messages as per the provincial department of health protocol if it exists.

Privacy and confidentiality:

Participant's contact details (cellular phone number, address, etc), these will only be available to name senior research staff involved in the study. Details will not be shared with the clinic staff or with any other service provider unless permission to do so is expressly given by the participant once the study has concluded. Data will be captured using a combination of electronic data capture and paper case-report forms (CRFs). CRFs will be entered onto the trial database on the day of collection. The trial database will include checks for logic and consistency to be resolved by the local investigators. Data will be stored on a computer with individually assigned passwords and individually assigned levels of access. The trial database will include a full audit trail of any changes made. Randomisation codes will be separately stored and accessible only by the trial statistician. No personal data will be included in the trial database and participants will be identifiable only by a unique study number. All essential documents will be retained in a trial master file. Trial documentation will be archived and stored for seven years.

Potential for harm:

The measurements we propose to take including blood pressure, height, weight, and waist circumference are very safe and are regularly used in routine clinical care. We will be taking participant's blood pressure a few more times than is usually done in the clinic which could cause some discomfort. The potential for harm to patients as a result of the trial intervention is judged as low. The University maintains Public Liability and Professional Liability insurance which will operate in this respect.

Potential benefits to individual participants:

All study participants will receive SMS-text messages which they may find beneficial. Participants will have their blood pressure accurately measured on at least three occasions.

Rewards:

This study is not providing any rewards or compensation to participants. Study participants are not provided cell-phones or network airtime credit, however receiving SMS-texts or phone calls or sending please call me messages to the study are free.

Study funding:

This study is funded as part of a programme grant from the Wellcome Trust and EPSRC (Grant Number DFR RDV0).

Pilot and preparatory work prior to the starting the StAR* study:

The protocol also includes brief summaries of preparatory and pilot work that will be carried out to optimise the trial design and procedures prior to beginning the StAR* study (these "StAR* study development phase projects" can be found in section 11 of the study protocol).

연구 유형

중재적

등록 (실제)

1372

단계

  • 해당 없음

참여기준

연구원은 적격성 기준이라는 특정 설명에 맞는 사람을 찾습니다. 이러한 기준의 몇 가지 예는 개인의 일반적인 건강 상태 또는 이전 치료입니다.

자격 기준

공부할 수 있는 나이

20년 이상 (성인, 고령자)

건강한 자원 봉사자를 받아들입니다

아니

연구 대상 성별

모두

설명

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Clinical diagnosis of hypertension and are either currently receiving or are about to start blood pressure lowering medication
  • Mean blood pressure at enrolment is < 175/105
  • Aged 21 years or older
  • Must have access to a cell-phone (shared access is allowed if access is daily and the phone owner agrees to participate)
  • Must be able to use SMS-text (help by a partner is allowed for illiterate subjects, subjects with poor vision, or subjects who are learning disabled)
  • Must be resident in the study area and must be expected to be resident for the duration of the study

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Another member of the household has already been recruited into the trial
  • If female, they are not pregnant or within three months post-partum by self-report
  • They are not willing to give informed consent and take part in the study.

공부 계획

이 섹션에서는 연구 설계 방법과 연구가 측정하는 내용을 포함하여 연구 계획에 대한 세부 정보를 제공합니다.

연구는 어떻게 설계됩니까?

디자인 세부사항

  • 주 목적: 지지 요법
  • 할당: 무작위
  • 중재 모델: 병렬 할당
  • 마스킹: 없음(오픈 라벨)

무기와 개입

참가자 그룹 / 팔
개입 / 치료
활성 비교기: Enhanced usual care
In addition to usual care participants will receive the pre-randomisation "Welcome to the *StAR Study" SMS-text, post-randomisation they will received a "Happy Birthday" SMS-text on their date of birth and up to six additional SMS-text messages containing study specific information and thanking the participant for taking part in the study. Participants in the Enhanced Usual Care group will receive no more than one study specific SMS-text every two months.
실험적: Informational SMS-text

In addition to enhanced usual care, participants allocated to the informational SMS-text support group will receive a series of text-messages covering the following areas:

I. Medication pick-up reminders send 48 hours before scheduled medication pick-up date a) Participants who fail to pick-up medication within 3 days of scheduled pick-up date will be sent one further reminder SMS-text

II. III. Clinic appointment reminder 48 hours before scheduled follow-up appointment

a) Participants who fail to attend clinic appointment will be sent an additional SMS-text checking they are alright and inviting them to rebook their appointment via the clinic IV. Messages which support medication adherence (focused on organisation, memory, and habit) or provide hypertension related health information

실험적: Interactive SMS-text
In addition to enhanced usual care and informational SMS-text messages, SMS-text messages sent to participants in the interactive SMS-text group will contain a "prompt to respond" which will guide participants to additional SMS-text based resources.

연구는 무엇을 측정합니까?

주요 결과 측정

결과 측정
측정값 설명
기간
Change in systolic blood pressure
기간: 12-months from baseline
The primary outcome is change in systolic blood pressure which we will analyse using a mixed-effects model on data collected at 6 and 12-months.
12-months from baseline

2차 결과 측정

결과 측정
측정값 설명
기간
Measured treatment adherence
기간: 3-monthly intervals over 12-months of follow-up
Treatment adherence is assessed by calculating the proportion of days covered from routinely collected prescribing and dispensing data obtained during the 12-month follow-up period.
3-monthly intervals over 12-months of follow-up

기타 결과 측정

결과 측정
측정값 설명
기간
Proportion of participants with a systolic blood pressure < 140 mmHg and a diastolic blood pressure <90 mmHg
기간: At 12-months
At 12-months
Hospital admissions for hypertension related illnesses
기간: At 12-months
At 12-months
Self-reported health status
기간: At 12-months
EuroQol 5-Dimension and Visual Analogue Scale
At 12-months
Proportion of scheduled clinic appointments attended
기간: At 12-months
At 12-months
Satisfaction with clinic services and care
기간: At 12-months
Assessed using 12 5-point Likert-scale items adapted from locally appropriate questionnaires developed to capture patient satisfaction with services.
At 12-months
Self-reported adherence to antihypertensive treatment
기간: At 12-months
At 12-months
Basic knowledge about hypertension
기간: At 12-months
At 12-months

공동 작업자 및 조사자

여기에서 이 연구와 관련된 사람과 조직을 찾을 수 있습니다.

수사관

  • 연구 의자: Lionel Tarassenko, MA, DPhil, FREng, FIET, University of Oxford
  • 수석 연구원: Andrew Farmer, DM FRCGP, University of Oxford
  • 수석 연구원: Naomi Levitt, MBChB, MD and FCP(SA)), University of Cape Town

간행물 및 유용한 링크

연구에 대한 정보 입력을 담당하는 사람이 자발적으로 이러한 간행물을 제공합니다. 이것은 연구와 관련된 모든 것에 관한 것일 수 있습니다.

연구 기록 날짜

이 날짜는 ClinicalTrials.gov에 대한 연구 기록 및 요약 결과 제출의 진행 상황을 추적합니다. 연구 기록 및 보고된 결과는 공개 웹사이트에 게시되기 전에 특정 품질 관리 기준을 충족하는지 확인하기 위해 국립 의학 도서관(NLM)에서 검토합니다.

연구 주요 날짜

연구 시작

2012년 6월 1일

기본 완료 (실제)

2014년 2월 1일

연구 완료 (실제)

2014년 8월 1일

연구 등록 날짜

최초 제출

2013년 12월 18일

QC 기준을 충족하는 최초 제출

2013년 12월 18일

처음 게시됨 (추정)

2013년 12월 24일

연구 기록 업데이트

마지막 업데이트 게시됨 (추정)

2014년 11월 11일

QC 기준을 충족하는 마지막 업데이트 제출

2014년 11월 10일

마지막으로 확인됨

2014년 11월 1일

추가 정보

이 연구와 관련된 용어

추가 관련 MeSH 약관

기타 연구 ID 번호

  • SMSBP
  • NHREC# 2868 (레지스트리 식별자: South African National Clinical Trials Register)
  • 418/2011 (기타 식별자: University of Cape Town Human Subjects Research Ethics Committee)
  • 141/2011 (기타 식별자: Western Cape Province Department of Health Research Committee)

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