Personalized Alerts and Care Pathways to Prompt Prevention Interventions for Alcohol and Tobacco Users in Primary Care

NCT03108144 · Status: COMPLETED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 15222

Last updated 2018-06-21

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

Tobacco and alcohol use present multiplicative risk for aerodigestive cancers. Reducing alcohol consumption improves smoking cessation outcomes and reduces cancer risk. Risky alcohol consumption and smoking are often treated separately despite concurrent treatment potentially leading to better outcomes for each. However, no rapidly scalable program exists for combined interventions in primary care clinics spread across wide geographic areas. This cluster randomized trial aims to report on the effects of a novel clinical decision support system (CDSS) on intervention rates by primary care practitioners addressing risky alcohol use in a smoking cessation program.

The investigators will be implementing a clinical decision support system (CDSS) in 221 primary care sites participating in the Smoking Treatment for Ontario Patients (STOP) program across Ontario, Canada. Sites will be blindly allocated to one of two clinical decision support systems guiding practitioners to provide a risky alcohol use intervention to smokers attempting to quit using nicotine replacement therapy (NRT). Risky alcohol use is defined as drinking above the Canadian Cancer Society's low-risk drinking guidelines. Primary analysis will measure the proportion of risky drinkers offered an alcohol intervention in each CDSS arm at baseline. Patients will be contacted by phone or email to track smoking cessation and alcohol consumption rates at 6- and 12-month follow up.

Upon completion of the trial, the effect of different clinical decision support systems on practitioner behavior, and on client tobacco and alcohol use, will be discussed. If the CDSS successfully promotes SBIRT for risky alcohol use in a primary care setting and/or improves patient-level outcomes, including smoking cessation rates and alcohol use reduction, this tool can be used as a model for other web-based behavior change interventions integrated into primary care practice.

Conditions

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Brief alcohol intervention

The intervention is a clinical decision support system (CDSS) that provides a computerized prompt in the clinic's online portal. The CDSS prompts a practitioner to intervene when a patient is screening above recommended drinking guidelines. The prompt appears as an alert message, recommending intervention. The portal suggests scripted brief intervention language, designed based on the College of Family Physicians of Canada and Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse's resource on conducting evidence-based Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) guidelines.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Canadian Cancer Society (CCS)

    collaborator OTHER
  • Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Peter Selby, MBBS CCFP FCFP MHSc DipABAM · Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

Study Design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Model
PARALLEL

Eligibility

Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2016-04-11
Primary Completion
2017-09-30
Completion
2018-04-30

Countries

  • Canada

Study Locations

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Entities

Diseases

Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT03108144 on ClinicalTrials.gov