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Shared-Decision Making for Hydroxyurea

Not Applicable
Conditions
Children, Only
Sickle Cell Anemia
Interventions
Behavioral: Clinician Pocket Guide
Behavioral: Hydroxyurea SDM Toolkit
Registration Number
NCT03442114
Lead Sponsor
Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati
Brief Summary

The goal of the study is to understand how best to help parents of young children with sickle cell disease and their clinicians have a shared discussion about hydroxyurea (one that takes into account medical evidence and parent values and preferences). The study will compare two methods to help clinicians facilitate this-a clinician pocket guide and a clinician hydroxyurea shared decision making toolkit-in a group of parents of children ages 0-5 with sickle cell disease. The investigators hope that both methods lead to parents reaching a high-quality, well-informed decision. In addition, the team hopes to demonstrate that parents who experience a shared decision will have lower anxiety and decisional uncertainty. The researchers also expect these parents to be more likely to choose hydroxyurea and that their children will have less pain, fewer hospitalizations, better developmental outcomes, and higher quality of life. The project team hopes to show that the toolkit method is easy for clinicians to use and gives parents the support needed to make an informed decision.

Detailed Description

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a genetic blood disorder that places children at risk for serious medical complications, early morbidity and mortality, and high healthcare utilization. In the U.S., SCD primarily affects African-American and Latino children. Hydroxyurea is one of the only disease-modifying treatment for this devastating and life-threatening disease. National Evidence-Based Guidelines recommend the use of a shared decision making approach to offer hydroxyurea to all children with SCD as early as nine months of age. Hydroxyurea uptake remains low because parents lack information about hydroxyurea and have concerns about its safety and potential long-term side effects (e.g. cancer, infertility, birth defects). Clinicians do not have the training or tools to facilitate a shared discussion with parents that provides medical evidence and considers parent preferences and values. The current study compares two methods for disseminating hydroxyurea guidelines and facilitating shared decision-making: the American Society of Hematology's hydroxyurea clinician pocket guide (usual care method) and a clinician hydroxyurea shared decision-making toolkit (H-SDM toolkit). The specific aims of the study are to evaluate the effectiveness of the usual care dissemination method (clinician pocket guide) and the H-SDM clinician toolkit dissemination method on: parent report of decisional uncertainty (primary outcome chosen by parents of children with SCD), parent perception of experiencing shared decision-making, parent knowledge of hydroxyurea, the number of children offered hydroxyurea, hydroxyurea uptake (those with active prescriptions), and child health outcomes (pain, neurocognitive functioning, sickle cell related quality of life and healthcare utilization). Eligible children must be between the ages of 0 and 5 and a candidate for hydroxyurea to participate. The trial will use a stepped-wedge design (clinic is the unit of randomization). The long-term objective of the research team is to improve the quality of care for children with SCD. The investigators propose that suboptimal care for patients with SCD is preventable with the use of multicomponent dissemination methods if developed with key stakeholders and designed to address barriers to high quality care at multiple levels (patient, clinician, healthcare system, and community).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
260
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Diagnosis: sickle cell disease
  2. Age: birth-5 years, inclusive
  3. Eligible for hydroxyurea (genotype SS, Sβ0Thal or other genotype + clinical complications)
  4. Child's parent, legal guardian, or designated decision maker (caregiver) must participate in both study visits
  5. Child's parent, legal guardian, or designated decision maker (caregiver) must able to read, understand, and speak English
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Parent/legal guardian has previously been approached OR made a decision about whether to initiate hydroxyurea.
  2. Any and all other diagnoses or conditions which, in the opinion of the site investigator or hematologist, would prevent the patient from being a suitable candidate for the study.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SEQUENTIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Clinician Pocket GuideClinician Pocket GuideIn this condition, sites will provide current guidelines for offering hydroxyurea and use the American Society of Hematology (ASH) pocket guide as a reference. ASH developed 'The Hydroxyurea and Transfusion Therapy for the Treatment of Sickle Cell Disease' clinician pocket guide based on the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute's Evidence Based Management of Sickle Cell Disease: Expert Panel Report, 2014.'
Hydroxyurea SDM Toolkit (H-SDM)Hydroxyurea SDM ToolkitDuring the H-SDM toolkit condition, sites will develop methods for identifying Eligible Patients \& Monitoring Progress, have the opportunity to use Implementation Tools, and will use the Visit Decision Aids. The H-SDM toolkit has four visit decision aids to support parents in their decision about hydroxyurea: pre-visit brochure, in-visit issue card, after-visit booklet and video narratives {videos of parents telling their story about how they made a decision about hydroxyurea).
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Decisional conflictup to 4 weeks

Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Shared decision makingup to 4 weeks

Dyadic OPTION

Hydroxyurea offeredFrom date of randomization until the date of first documented offering or prescription, whichever came first, assessed up to 7 months

electronic medical record (EMR) data

Trial Locations

Locations (11)

Nemours Children's Health

🇺🇸

Wilmington, Delaware, United States

Howard University

🇺🇸

Washington, District of Columbia, United States

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

🇺🇸

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Nationwide Children's Hospital

🇺🇸

Columbus, Ohio, United States

UCSF Beinoff Children's Hospital and Research Center at Oakland

🇺🇸

Oakland, California, United States

Indiana Hemophilia & Thrombosis Center

🇺🇸

Indianapolis, Indiana, United States

Ann & Robert H Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago

🇺🇸

Chicago, Illinois, United States

Boston Children's Hospital

🇺🇸

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

The Washington University

🇺🇸

Saint Louis, Missouri, United States

Baylor College of Medicine

🇺🇸

Houston, Texas, United States

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

🇺🇸

Nashville, Tennessee, United States

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