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Enhanced Medication Reconciliation For Serious Mental Illness

Not Applicable
Terminated
Conditions
Mental Disorders
Interventions
Diagnostic Test: Sano Patient Medication Profile
Registration Number
NCT03169868
Lead Sponsor
Precera Bioscience, Inc.
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the clinical utility of a decision support tool, the Patient Medication Profile(TM), developed by Sano Informed Prescribing on medication reconciliation and identification of drug-related problems in patients with serious mental illness.

Detailed Description

Lack of adherence to medications is an identifiable and growing problem in the United States and can result in disease progression, disease complications, treatment failure, a lower quality of life, and increased morbidity and mortality. Medication-related problems and medication nonadherence have been estimated to cost $177 billion annually in total direct and indirect U.S. health care costs. Moreover, medication adherence rates are poor for individuals diagnosed with chronic conditions such as diabetes, depression, and schizophrenia, which require long-term therapy. Recent publications have estimated that nearly 50% of patients in the U.S. being treated for chronic conditions are non-adherent to their medication regimens. Although increased medication adherence may lead to increased spending on drug therapy, it is associated with greatly reduced total health care costs and usage, and better patient outcomes.

Persons diagnosed with serious mental illness (SMI) such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are at higher risk than the general population for medication nonadherence, cardiovascular mortality, and medical co-morbidities such as diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia, obesity, nicotine dependence, and coronary heart disease. Poor adherence to complex medication regimens, decreased access to care, and uncoordinated care between psychiatry and medical care teams, have been identified as key contributors to the disparities experienced by this patient population.

The United States healthcare system is complex and healthcare is fragmented, particularly for those with serious mental illness who are often prescribed multiple medications from numerous providers. One unifying piece of information that is of critical importance for optimizing patient care is the patient medication list. Unfortunately, appropriate medication reconciliation to obtain the correct medication list and information about medication adherence is a complex and imperfect process. Using patient pharmacy records, electronic health record (EHR), and patient interviews, discrepancies have been found with over one third of patients upon hospital admission. Therefore, it can be expected that most polypharmacy patients (defined as taking five or more medications) have errors in their medical record.

National and world health associations have identified several opportunities for health professionals to provide services that aim to increase medication adherence and decrease medication related problems. Several of the recommendations emphasize the use of coordinated multidisciplinary efforts to provide patients with the most access to care and the highest quality education about their medications. Pharmacists are among the most accessible health care professionals and have specialized training to identify, prevent, and resolve drug-related problems (DRPs). As medication experts, pharmacists are important members of the multidisciplinary team and are uniquely positioned to impact medication-related health outcomes through accurate medication reconciliation, comprehensive mediation reviews (CMR), and interventions to improve medication safety and adherence.

An objective measure of what medications patients are actually taking would enable healthcare teams to better identify and tailor interventions to each specific patient situation. Using a novel therapeutic drug monitoring assay and empirical clinical decision support tool, Sano has shown that errors in patient medication lists are prevalent and poorly reflect patient adherence to the intended medication regimen and actual medication exposure. For example, in a cohort of psychiatry patients, only 37% were fully adherent to all medications in their treatment regimen and roughly one in five medications detected was not in the medical record. We anticipate that when medication reconciliation is performed by a pharmacist using Sano's clinical decision support tool, medication adherence will improve and more drug therapy problems will be identified and resolved. As a result, we expect to see an improvement in patient outcomes and a reduction in healthcare spending (i.e. post-hospitalization unplanned healthcare utilization).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
TERMINATED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
26
Inclusion Criteria
  • Current insurer is UPMC Health Plan
  • Currently active in CRS clinic
  • Prescribed four or more medications as indicated by pre-study Health Plan Medication List
  • Able to provide informed consent for present study
Exclusion Criteria
  • Not competent to give informed consent in the opinion of the investigator
  • Having had a previous medication reconciliation by the clinical pharmacist

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Enhanced Medication reconciliationSano Patient Medication ProfileMedication reconciliation with pharmacist using electronic health records, pharmacy dispensing data and Sano Patient Medication Profile(TM)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Medical record accuracy3 months

The "Final Medication List" (medications in EHR at final visit) will be compared to the detected medications as summarized in the Patient Medication Profile at final visit (approx 3 months). For each patient, the proportion of detected medications that are not in the medication list will be calculated, excluding OTC medications from the analysis. Medical record accuracy in the intervention and control groups will be compared.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Drug Related Problem Identification and resolution3 months

Documented drug related problems identified by the pharmacist will be compared between the intervention and control groups at baseline and final visit. The number of changes in medications to resolve drug related problems, such as medication additions, terminations, dosage or frequency changes will be compared between the intervention and control groups

Adherence to prescribed medications3 months

For each patient, the proportion of medications that are in the "Optimized Medication List" (medications that patient should be taking after pharmacist medication reconciliation and interview) and detected as summarized in the Patient Medication Profile will be calculated. Medications with half-life \< three hours will be excluded, as will be medications prescribed "as needed" (PRN).

Automated vs. manual pharmacist-led medication reconciliation0 months

Compare automated Sano Patient Medication Profile medication list to the manual pharmacist-led reconciliation which includes review of medication lists from available EHRs, pharmacy dispensing data and patient interview. For each patient in the control group, calculate the number of drug additions and/or subtractions to arrive at the "Informed Medication List" (review of EHR and pharmacy dispensing during patient interview with/without the Sano test) from the "Reconciled Medication List" (EHR, pharmacy dispensing) vs. the number of additions / subtractions to arrive at the Informed Medication List from the Patient Medication Profile.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic of UPMC

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Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

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