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Interactive Computer-adaptive Chronic Kidney Disease Education Program

NCT06364358 · University of Chicago
In plain English

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Official title
A Pilot to Develop and Test an Interactive Computer-adaptive Chronic Kidney Disease Education Program for Hospitalized African American Patients (I-C-CKD)
About this study
The goal of this pilot clinical trial is to evaluate a culturally tailored adaptive computerized education program in hospitalized African-American patients with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD). The investigator's first hypothesis is that computerized adaptive education (CAE) will be more effective than standard of care in improving knowledge about self-care for advanced CKD and renal replacement therapy (RRT) options (Primary Outcome). The primary outcome is knowledge about CKD and knowledge about RRT. The study team will measure this using the Kidney Disease Knowledge Survey (KiKs). The investigator's second hypothesis is that CAE will increase patients' intent to participate in CKD self-care (to take diabetes and/or hypertension meds, see a nephrologist, and make additional lifestyle changes like smoking cessation, exercise, low-salt diet) compared to standard of care. The study team will measure this using an investigator-developed Health Intent Survey and measure patient activation through the Patient Activation Measure (PAM). Similarly, the investigator hypothesizes that CAE will increase patients' intent to obtain non-catheter access prior to dialysis initiation, to initiate self-care dialysis (peritoneal (PD) or home hemodialysis (HHD), and/or have transplant evaluation compared to standard of care. The study team will measure this using an investigator-developed Health Intent Survey. The investigator's final hypothesis is that CAE will increase patients' action at 30 days post-discharge in participating in CKD self-care and CKD health-seeking behavior compared to standard of care controls.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria: * African-American inpatients * Ages 18-70 * estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR)\<45 * Enrolled in the Hospitalist Project Exclusion Criteria: * Does not self-identify as African American * Not able to consent * Unable to speak English * eGFR \<45 due to acute kidney injury * In Intensive Care Unit * has had a transplant * currently on dialysis
Study design
Enrollment target: 120 participants
Allocation: randomized
Masking: single
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2023-05-31
Estimated completion: 2026-09
Last updated: 2025-01-08
Interventions
Behavioral: Computerized CKD EducationBehavioral: Usual Hospital Care
Primary outcomes
  • Change in CKD Knowledge baseline to post patient education intervention (Baseline and 1 day post-intervention)
  • Change in Knowledge about end stage kidney disease (ESKD) treatments from baseline to 1 day post patient education intervention (Baseline and 1 day post-intervention)
  • Change in ESKD Treatment Preferences from baseline to 1 day post-intervention (Baseline and 1 day post-intervention)
Sponsor
University of Chicago · other
With: National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Contacts & investigators
ContactMilda Saunders, MD · contact · msaunder@bsd.uchicago.edu · 7737025941
ContactAkilah King, MSW · contact · Akilah.King@bsd.uchicago.edu
InvestigatorMilda Saunders, MD · principal_investigator, Associate Professor of Medicine
All locations (1)
University of Chicago Medical CenterRecruiting
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Interactive Computer-adaptive Chronic Kidney Disease Education Program · TrialPath