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Evaluating FDA's Proposed Patient Medication Information Handout

Not Applicable
Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Knowledge
Attitude
Interventions
Other: FDA template PMI
Other: Standard Information
Other: Decision Critical PMI
Registration Number
NCT06320808
Lead Sponsor
Carnegie Mellon University
Brief Summary

The goal of this study is to assess how useful the proposed one-page FDA-template PMI is to potential users.

The main questions it aims to answer are:

How does the proposed one-page FDA-template PMI compare with the current drug information insert in terms of usefulness and comprehension?

and

How does the proposed one-page FDA-template PMI compare with a revision adding drug benefit information?

Participants will randomized to review one of three patient medication information sheets and then asked questions related to usefulness and comprehension.

Detailed Description

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has proposed a new one-page 'patient medication information (PMI) handout that can be provided with every prescription medication, in order to provide patients with the information they need to use their medications safely and effectively. The current proposal omits some decision-critical benefit information and had not been tested with potential users, potentially undermining its effectiveness.

The goal of this study is to assess how useful the proposed one-page FDA-template PMI is to potential users, compared with a revision adding drug benefit information and with the current drug information insert.

A randomized trial will be conducted with U.S. female adults 18-45 years, recruited in March, 2024. Participants will complete an online survey after being randomized to view 1 of the 3 information formats. Participants will be paid $10. Surveys are expected to take no more than 30 minutes to complete.

Participants will be randomized to receive either the one-page FDA-template PMI (FDA PMI), a modified template, which added information about drug benefits (Decision Critical PMI), or the existing drug information insert (standard drug information) for the drug, Mifeprex. All individuals will complete knowledge and usability questions and provide demographic information.

The main outcomes measured will be perceived usefulness and comprehension of the patient medication information.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
330
Inclusion Criteria
  • US geographic location
  • 18-45 years of age
  • assigned female sex at birth
Exclusion Criteria
  • <18 years of age
  • > 45 years of age
  • assigned a sex other than female at birth

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
FDA-template PMIFDA template PMIPatient medication information designed according to FDA template
Standard InformationStandard InformationStandard of care patient medication information
Decision Critical PMIDecision Critical PMIPatient medication information designed according to FDA template and modified, according to decision science principles, to include benefit information
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Perceived difficulty or ease in reading informationday 1

Single question with a 5-point likert scale response for "How easy or difficult was it to read the medication information guide about \[drug\]?" Minimum score is 1; Maximum score is 5. A higher score represents higher perceived usefulness.

Comprehensionday 1

10 newly-constructed questions designed to measure the comprehension of the following information from the medication information guide: 1) Analysis of condition (1 question) 2) Risks (3 questions) 3)Risk Management (3 questions), and 5) Benefits (3 questions). Participants can score from 0-10 with 10 representing full comprehension of the information and 0 representing no comprehension of the information.

Perceived usefulness of the medication information guide in making a use decisionday 1

Single question with a 5-point likert scale response for "For someone who had not yet decided to use \[drug\], how useful would the medication information guide be in helping them to make that decision?" Minimum score is 1. Maximum score is 5. A higher score represents higher perceived usefulness.

Perceived usefulness of the medication information guide in taking the medication properlyday 1

Single question with a 5-point likert scale response for "If someone had decided to use \[drug\], how useful would the medication information guide about \[drug\] be in helping them use the drug properly? " Minimum score is 1. Maximum score is 5. A higher score represents higher perceived usefulness.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Strength of Evidenceday 1

3 questions measuring strength of evidence. One asking about perceived strength of evidence, one about safety, and one about effectiveness of the medication. Each measured on a 5-point likert scale. The question text for each question, respectively, is "how strong is the scientific evidence that \[drug\], when taken correctly, helps patients \[purpose of drug\]?" "how safe is \[drug\], when taken correctly, for \[purpose of drug\]? "how effective is \[drug\], when taken correctly, for \[purpose of drug\]?"

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Carnegie Mellon University

🇺🇸

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

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