The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if the Pain Coach App will result in less opioids being prescribed to and used by patients undergoing Shoulder/Hip/Knee Arthroplasty surgery while maintaining the same or better pain control versus standard of care. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Will elective shoulder, hip and knee arthroplasty patients using PainCoach App be prescribed and/or use less opioids, measured by total morphine milliequivalents (MME) after surgery when compared to those treated as standard of care while maintaining similar pain control? 2. Will arthroplasty surgeons using PainCoach App write more patient-specific prescriptions resulting in a reduction in opioids prescribed after surgery with no increase in further opioids prescribed in the months following surgery? 3. Will the use of Pain Coach App lead to equal or reduced healthcare system utilization after surgery? 4. Will patients and surgeons using PainCoach App find it helpful enough to use it again and recommend to colleagues, family and friends? Researchers will compare participants assigned to use Pain Coach App vs participants assigned to standard of care arm to see if there are differences in opioid prescriptions and self reported use. Participants will either use the Pain Coach App or follow standard of care instructions and be followed forward for the opioid prescriptions dispensed in community and self-reported opioids use at study end.
This will be a randomized, parallel group prospective interventional study. Patient participants will be consented and then randomized using a tool built into RedCap to either the "treatment group" and a "control group". The treatment group will be sent an email with instructions to set up a Pain Coach Account and download the app onto their mobile device. (Phone or tablet)The control group will not be offered Pain Coach technology and will just follow the usual care pathway for arthroplasty patients. When a participant in the treatment arm completes the initial questionnaire within the app (known as the Pain Coach Profile) this information will be used by a pharmacist in the study to create a suggested prescription for that patient. This suggested prescription will be provided to the patients surgeon for them to review and either accept, edit or discard based on their own clinical judgement.- For the rest of the study the patients in the treatment arm will have access to the Pain Coach app functionalities and use them as they require/prefer. A survey will be sent to both treatment and control groups after their surgery on Post Op Day 2 and 30 to assess pain control. There will be an interim analysis once 281 participants have been recruited into each treatment arm. At this point a retrospective chart review will be used to identify ED related visits for surgical pain within 90 days will be compared between groups at 6 months, also the amount of opioids prescribed (and number of refills) up to 3 months after surgery will be recorded and compared between groups. If at this point there is a statistically significant difference between groups the study will end early. Otherwise it will control until 561 participants are assigned to each group. This will provide 80% power to detect a minimally clinically important difference of 10% reduction in opioid prescribing between groups.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
1,000
Pain Coach App is a mobile application that offers patients undergoing shoulder, hip and knee arthroplasty surgery preoperative educational tools and questionnaires to provide patient specific details to their surgeons for prescribing purposes as well as post operative pain assessment and medication reminders/tracking, problem troubleshooting and a resource library for further pain management tools and education.
Nova Scotia Health QEII and Dartmouth General Hospital
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada
Opioid Prescriptions Efficacy Information
Describe and compare immediate release opioids prescription quantities (in MME) filled by patients and surgeons using PainCoach App vs Standard of Care.
Time frame: At discharge, 2 weeks, 1 and 3 months after surgery.
Pain Related Adverse Effects
Assess for any Pain/Opioid related side effects by administering the QoR-15 questionnaire (see appendix to both groups and reviewing ED visits by patients in both treatment and control groups to ensure safety/efficacy of application use.
Time frame: Post Operative Day 2 and 30
Health Systems Usage
Describe patient reported interactions with the healthcare system including patient reported calls to surgeon's office, calls to the Orthopedic Assessment Clinic, calls to their primary care provider and calls to their pharmacy as a composite endpoint
Time frame: From discharge to 90 days post-op
Self reported Opioid usage
Describe and compare patients' self-reported usage of opioids after surgery. 1. How many days after surgery did they use opioids? 2. Did the patient use all of the opioids they were prescribed? (Yes/no) i. If no: How many opioid tablets did have left after surgery will be used to compare to amount originally filled to report absolute MME used after surgery for each treatment group.
Time frame: At Post Op Day 30
Surgeon Adoption
Describe satisfaction and compliance with PainCoach App prescribing tools. 1. Were surgeons satisfied with the prescriptions and progress notes provided by PainCoach App? 2. Frequency surgeon followed one of three pathways: if they used the full suggested prescription, made changes or used their default prescribing pathway ? Which will be identified via chart review.
Time frame: Study End
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