Multiple Intervention and AUdit in Renal Diseases to Optimize Care
Summary
Test whether the intensive intervention improves renal and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with chronic renal insufficiency.
Test whether a multi-method intensive intervention including clinical Audit improves adherence to a series of quality indicators relevant to hypertension control, proteinuria, treatment of dyslipidemia, anemia, calcium and phosphate alterations in patients with chronic renal insufficiency.
Description
Background:
Guidelines are currently promoted as a means for linking evidence based medicine to clinical practice and for reducing variation in clinical practice (1). However, there is ample evidence that implementation of evidence-based recommendations for prevention and management of renal disease progression and associated cardiovascular complications remain largely unsatisfactory (2). Deficiencies exist in the treatment of dyslipidemia and hypertension, inadequate use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers as well as in the treatment of anemia and of alterations in calcium and phosphate metabolism (2). Furthermore patients with diabetes mellitus infrequently receive recommended treatment for elevated glycosylated haemoglobin levels, hypertension, and dyslipidemia.
The importance of interventions to increase adherence to practice guidelines and to improve disease control is now widely perceived. However, little is known about the relative effectiveness of different implementation strategies. Fresh research is required to develop and validate practical strategies for improving the provision of evidence-based medicine in nephrology clinics. In particular, studies addressing multiple common, chronic conditions which simultaneously affect the population of patients with chronic renal insufficiency are now felt as of primary importance. The study was approved by Ethical Committees of all Nephrology Units participating into the MAURO study.
Specific hypotheses:
This study is designed as a clinical trial aimed at assessing whether a quality improvement intervention is more effective than standard care for improving adherence to a series of quality indicators relevant to the prevention of renal disease progression and associated cardiovascular complications. The multi-method quality improvement intervention (intensive intervention) adds practice site visits, telephone and e-mail contacts (for quality improvement facilitation) and audits to the approach of periodic guideline dissemination used in standard care.
Objective(s):
Test whether the intensive intervention improves renal and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with chronic renal insufficiency.
Test whether the intensive intervention improves adherence to a series of quality indicators relevant to hypertension control, proteinuria, treatment of dyslipidemia, anemia and calcium and phosphate alterations.
Endpoints:
The primary end point is a composite renal and cardiovascular end point, i.e. >30% decrease in the GFR, dialysis, transplantation, death or cardiovascular event [ECG documented angina or myocardial infarction, heart failure, arrhythmia (atrial fibrillation), cerebro-vascular event (stroke or transient ischemic attacks) or peripheral vascular diseases].
The renal unit-level outcome is the percentage of performance targets achieved. The patient level outcome is the percentage of patients for whom the recommended process measures occurs.
Key Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria:
- Creatinine >1.5 -4.0 mg/dL (males) and >1.3-3.5 mg/dL (females).
- Non acute or rapidly evolving renal diseases.
- Age range :18 - 75 years.
- Non-transplanted.
- Non-pregnant.
- Not affected by cancer or diseases in the terminal phase.
Study Design and procedures:
Randomized, controlled clinical trial, with the renal clinic as the unit of randomization.The two study arms (multi-intervention including AUDIT vs standard care) will be informed on the general aim of the study but will be kept blinded to the type of intervention made [(PRospective Blinded Intervention Design (PROBID)].
Drug Dosage, schedule and Route of Administration:
Drugs for the treatment of blood pressure, dyslipidemia, anemia and alterations in calcium phosphate metabolism will be administered according to doses recommended by the guidelines promoted by the Italian society of Nephrology and by the KDOQI guidelines.
Study duration:
Three years.
Sample Size for the primary end-point:
The sample size was calculated with the underlying assumption that the intracluster correlation coefficient (ICC)(estimated in a pilot study) be 0.016. The expected annual rate of the primary end point (at least 36% in 3 years) was derived from a previous study (3). With this background in mind, we found that allocating 330 patients in the active arm and 330 in the control arm, the study will have a 80% power for capturing as statistically significant (P <0.05, two tailed) a 1/3 risk reduction in three years (36% vs 24%) in the intensive intervention group.
Corollary information:
During the study a sera and DNA data-bank will be created to allow testing a series of open questions on renal disease progression and associated cardiovascular complications.
Ethical considerations:
The protocol is in conformity with the declaration of Helsinki and informed consent will be asked for to all participants.
Nephrology units participating into the MAURO study:
Soverato (CZ), Locri (RC), Cosenza, Melito (RC), Lungro (CS), Messina, Francavilla (TA), Crotone, Rossano (CS), Catanzaro (Ospedale Pugliese), Catanzaro (Policlinico Universitario), Lamezia (CZ), S. Giovanni in Fiore (CS), Palmi (RC), Paola (CS), Praia a Mare (CS), Tropea (VV), Catania , Taurianova (RC), Vibo Valentia, Soriano (VV), Sassari, Acireale (CT), Reggio Calabria, Amantea (CS).
References:
1. Hayward RS. Clinical practice guidelines on trial. CMAJ 1997; 156:1725-1727.
2. De Nicola L, Minutolo R, Chiodini P, Zoccali C, Castellino P, Donadio C, Strippoli M, Casino F, Giannattasio M, Petrarulo F, Virgilio M, Laraia E, Di Iorio BR, Savica V, Conte G; TArget Blood Pressure LEvels in Chronic Kidney Disease (TABLE in CKD) Study Group. Global approach to cardiovascular risk in chronic kidney disease: reality and opportunities for intervention. Kidney Int 2006;69:538-545.
3. Sarnak MJ, Greene T, Wang X, Beck G, Kusek JW, Collins AJ, Levey AS.The effect of a lower target blood pressure on the progression of kidney disease: long-term follow-up of the modification of diet in renal disease study.1: Ann Intern Med 2005; 142: 342-351.
Study Design
Allocation: Randomized, Control: Placebo Control, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Caregiver), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Conditions
Renal Insufficiency
Intervention
Audit-driven intervention
Location
Nephrology Units participating to the MAURO study in the
Calabrian, Sicily, Puglia and Sardenia Regions
Italy
Status
Recruiting
Source
National Research Council, Italy
Results (where available)
Links
- Source: http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT00566033
- Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on July 15, 2010
Medical and Biotech [MESH] Definitions
Renal Insufficiency
Conditions in which the KIDNEYS perform below the normal level in the ability to remove wastes, concentrate URINE, and maintain ELECTROLYTE BALANCE; BLOOD PRESSURE; and CALCIUM metabolism. Renal insufficiency can be classified by the degree of kidney damage (as measured by the level of PROTEINURIA) and reduction in GLOMERULAR FILTRATION RATE. The most severe form is KIDNEY FAILURE. Renal function may deteriorate slowly (RENAL INSUFFICIENCY, CHRONIC) or precipitously (RENAL INSUFFICIENCY, ACUTE).
Nephrocalcinosis
A condition characterized by calcification of the renal tissue itself. It is usually seen in distal RENAL TUBULAR ACIDOSIS with calcium deposition in the DISTAL KIDNEY TUBULES and the surrounding interstitium. Nephrocalcinosis causes RENAL INSUFFICIENCY.
Renal Insufficiency, Chronic
Conditions in which the KIDNEYS perform below the normal level for more than three months. Chronic kidney insufficiency is classified by five stages according to the decline in GLOMERULAR FILTRATION RATE and the degree of kidney damage (as measured by the level of PROTEINURIA). The most severe form is the end-stage renal disease (CHRONIC KIDNEY FAILURE). (Kidney Foundation: Kidney Disease Outcome Quality Initiative, 2002)
Uranyl Nitrate
Bis(nitrato-O)dioxouranium. A compound used in photography and the porcelain industry. It causes severe renal insufficiency and renal tubular necrosis in mammals and is an effective lymphocyte mitogen.
Glomerulonephritis
Inflammation of the renal glomeruli (KIDNEY GLOMERULUS) that can be classified by the type of glomerular injuries including antibody deposition, complement activation, cellular proliferation, and glomerulosclerosis. These structural and functional abnormalities usually lead to HEMATURIA; PROTEINURIA; HYPERTENSION; and RENAL INSUFFICIENCY.
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