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Using routine healthcare data to evaluate the impact of the Medicines at Transitions Intervention (MaTI) on clinical outcomes of patients hospitalised with heart failure: protocol for the Improving the Safety and Continuity Of Medicines management at Transitions of care (ISCOMAT) cluster randomised controlled trial with embedded process evaluation, health economics evaluation and internal pilot

Authors :
Lauren A Moreau
Ivana Holloway
Beth Fylan
Suzanne Hartley
Bonnie Cundill
Alison Fergusson
Sarah Alderson
David Phillip Alldred
Chris Bojke
Liz Breen
Hanif Ismail
Peter Gardner
Ellen Mason
Catherine Powell
Jonathan Silcock
Andrew Taylor
Amanda Farrin
Chris Gale
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2022.

Abstract

IntroductionHeart failure affects 26 million people globally, approximately 900 thousand people in the UK, and is increasing in incidence. Appropriate management of medicines for heart failure at the time of hospital discharge reduces readmissions, improves quality of life and increases survival. The Improving the Safety and Continuity Of Medicines management at Transitions (ISCOMAT) trial tests the effectiveness of the Medicines at Transition Intervention (MaTI), which aims to enhance self-care and increase community pharmacy involvement in the medicines management of heart failure patients.Methods and analysisISCOMAT is a parallel-group cluster randomised controlled trial, randomising 42 National Health Service trusts with cardiology wards in England on a 1:1 basis to implement the MaTI or treatment as usual. Around 2100 patients over the age of 18 admitted to hospital with heart failure with at least moderate left ventricular systolic dysfunction within the last 5 years, and planned discharge to the geographical area of the cluster will be recruited. The MaTI consists of training for staff, a toolkit for participants, transfer of discharge information to community pharmacies and a medicines reconciliation/review. Treatment as usual is determined by local policy and practices. The primary outcome is a composite of all-cause mortality and heart failure-related hospitalisation at 12 months postregistration obtained from national electronic health records. The key secondary outcome is continued prescription of guideline-indicated therapies at 12 months measured via patient-reported data and Hospital Episode Statistics. The trial contains a parallel mixed-methods process evaluation and an embedded health economics study.Ethics and disseminationThe study obtained approval from the Yorkshire and the Humber—Bradford Leeds Research Ethics Committee; REC reference 18/YH/0017. Findings will be disseminated via academic and policy conferences, peer-reviewed publications and social media. Amendments to the protocol are disseminated to all relevant parties as required.Trial registration numberISRCTN66212970; Pre-results.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....11bf1b9380484e386eebd553bcc485c2