Clinical Decision Support for Blood Transfusions to Improve Guideline Adherence

NCT05634005 · Status: COMPLETED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 1543

Last updated 2025-03-06

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

Determine whether clinical decision support (best practice advisory) improves provider adherence to transfusion guidelines for all four major blood components (red blood cells, plasma, platelets, and cryoprecipitate) using a randomized study design to reduce risk of bias. Alerts will be visible to the experimental ordering provider group, while they will not be visible to the control. Both groups still have access to information about best practices: local clinical transfusion guidelines are available and education on blood transfusion best practices will continue regardless of randomization assignment.

Conditions

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Clinical Decision Support

In blood product order entry within the electronic health record, the ordering provider is required to select an indication for the blood product order. If the patient's laboratory values are not in line with the guideline indication selected, a clinical decision support alert will fire and be shown to the ordering provider. This alert will inform the provider that the order is outside institutional guidelines and the provider has the option to cancel the order (or bypass the order and select a reason for proceeding with the order).

Sponsors & Collaborators

Principal Investigators

  • Ryan Metcalf, MD · University of Utah

Study Design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Model
PARALLEL

Eligibility

Min Age
18 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2023-02-01
Primary Completion
2024-02-01
Completion
2024-02-01

Countries

  • United States

Study Locations

More Related Trials

Entities

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 NCT05634005 on ClinicalTrials.gov