A cluster-randomized controlled trial (RCT) called "Reducing Risk of Dementia through Deprescribing" (R2D2) to evaluate the impact of a deprescribing intervention on important cognitive and safety outcomes.
The R2D2 study will test whether the adverse cognitive effects of anticholinergic medications are reversible by implementing a pharmacist-based deprescribing intervention for older adults within primary care practices. Two groups will be recruited: providers (physicians and advanced practice providers including nurse practitioners), and patients. Primary care providers of those prescribed eligible anticholinergic medications will be recruited for participation in the study, and their patients who also meet eligible criteria will be subsequently approached and recruited. Participants will be randomized to one of two groups: the deprescribing intervention group or usual care; the intervention group will receive a pharmacist-based deprescribing intervention, while the usual care group will receive care as usually provided by their primary and/or specialty care providers. The intervention and follow-up data collection will occur over 24 months in order to test the long-term impact of the intervention on the planned clinical outcomes. Study outcomes include cognition (primary) and safety (secondary) through validated self-reported scales.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
344
The active intervention group (ACT) will receive a pharmacist-based deprescribing intervention focused only on targeted anticholinergic medications. The intervention pharmacist will serve as the central source of communication between participants, providers, and (as needed) dispensing pharmacy to coordinate the deprescribing process. The study pharmacists will navigate a shared-decision model between the physicians and participant in order to personalize the selection of appropriate alternatives and switch/titration schedules. Importantly, the pharmacist will supervise the titration and deprescribing plan and communicate with both participants and physicians throughout the study.
Those in the usual care group will not have access to the study intervention, but will receive a one-time information packet through the mail reviewing risks of polypharmacy, but no information specific to anticholinergic medications. They will receive clinical care as usually provided by their primary care or specialty care physicians.
Indiana University Health
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Community Health Network Foundation, Inc.
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Change in Cognitive Composite Score
Cognitive composite scores will be collected from participants at baseline, 6, 12, 18 and 24 months and changes in the composite scores over time will be compared between the intervention and usual care groups. An overall cognitive composite score including measures of information processing speed, memory, and executive function will be conducted at each time point from the average of each measure's z-score, constructed by subtracting the mean baseline scores and dividing by the baseline standard deviation. The z-score transformation of the cognitive composite score will have a mean of 0 and standard deviation of 1 at baseline, with higher scores representing improvement in cognition.
Time frame: Baseline, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months
Change in Patient Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS)
Participant self-reported, 4-item scales evaluating depression, anxiety, pain, and insomnia will be collected for each participant at each time point. Each PROMIS measure raw score can be converted to a T-score where 50 represents the general population norm for that symptom and each 10-point deviation represents one standard deviation (SD) from the population norm. Changes in the T-scores over time will be compared between the intervention and usual care groups.
Time frame: Baseline, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months
Change in Health Utilities Index (HUI)
Participant self-reported measure of health-related quality of life, evaluating domains including vision, hearing, speech, ambulation, dexterity, emotion, cognitive function and pain. These attributes produce a single score on a standardized utility measure with individual health domain scores ranging from 0.00 (maximum impairment) to 1.00 (no impairment) and the multi-attribute (HUI) scores ranging from 0.36 to 1.00 with anchors 0.00 = dead and 1.00 = perfect health. HUI scores will be collected at each outcome assessment and change in HUI scores over time will be compared between the intervention and usual care groups.
Time frame: Baseline, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.