This study is a randomized controlled trial across 14 community pharmacies to test the efficacy of the Brief Intervention-Medication Therapy Management intervention (BI-MTM). The establishment of the BI-MTM model will result in a major impact for addressing the opioid epidemic, preventing opioid use disorder and overdose, and safeguarding patient health in a novel community-based service setting.
This study examines a community pharmacy-based intervention to reduce opioid medication misuse. Despite a recent national decline in opioid prescribing, 10.3 million Americans in 2018 reported misusing a prescribed opioid, and within this population, \>36% of those who misused obtained the opioid medication by filling a prescription. The point of medication dispensing, namely, the community pharmacy, is an untapped resource to address prescription opioid misuse-especially when considering the \>60,000 pharmacies employing \>170,000 pharmacists in the US. This study aims to conduct a fully-powered RCT of the BI-MTM intervention in community pharmacy settings that will accomplish 3 Specific Aims. The first Aim will demonstrate the pharmacist-led BI-MTM intervention is superior to standard medication counseling (SMC) for mitigating opioid medication misuse. This will be accomplished by conducting a powered single-blinded randomized trial to test the efficacy of BI-MTM (n=175) vs. SMC (n=175). Participants will be screened/recruited for eligibility at point of dispensing in 14 community pharmacies in Utah, a high opioid prescribing and opioid-adverse event state. Participants will be assessed at baseline, 2, and 6 months for opioid medication misuse. Participant-level state prescription drug monitoring data will also be linked with patient outcomes to assess objective changes in medication misuse behaviors (e.g., early refills and doctor/pharmacy shopping). The second Aim will identify the pathway by which BI-MTM results in improvements for depression, pain, and subsequently opioid misuse. To accomplish this, a path analysis will assess relationships of BI-MTM: (1) on depression, pain, and misuse, (2) depression on misuse, and (3) pain on misuse. The final Aim will explore latent transitions of baseline to post-intervention misuse classes by intervention group. This will be accomplished by using mixture modeling, specifically multi-group latent transition analysis. The observed misuse indicators will be used to estimate latent class transitions across time, grouping by treatment condition and adjusting for baseline covariates. Completing SA1- 3 advance the understanding of BI-MTM efficacy and set the stage for a national multisite trial.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
350
PN involves 8 weekly telephonic sessions lasting 30-45 minutes (telephonic to support lower-costs/sustainability). In session 1, the navigator reviews with the participant a report of scores from the baseline assessment to understand the participant's current health needs/challenges; session 1 also involves development of therapeutic alliance/rapport and goal setting. Sessions 2-4 focus on goal setting and identifying barriers and problem resolutions. The navigator elicits motivation and discusses this in context of readiness to change heath behavior and self-management skills. Sessions 2-4 also involve navigators supporting/assisting patients to fill out paperwork and enroll in needed social services and/or mental/behavioral/physical healthcare, including but not limited to primary care. Sessions 5-7 focus on encouraging and reinforcing treatment adherence, review-ing and identifying other care needs, and offering linkages to service providers as applicable
SMC participants receive a single medication information/counseling session delivered by a University of Utah pharmacist to: (1) offer counseling, (2) document counseling was offered, (3) offer a counseling process for patients not present (not applicable to this study given all patients must screen in person), and (4) discuss generic substitution.
University of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
Change in opioid medication misuse.
This outcome will be assessed using the Prescription Opioid Misuse Index (POMI).
Time frame: 6 months
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