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Nurse-led Physician-supported Care for Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease and Multimorbidity
Sponsor: Alexandra Hospital
Summary
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a prevalent chronic disease and is often intertwined with the management of cardiovascular disease and the optimization of metabolic risk factors. In light of steeply rising rates of end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) and increased healthcare resource utilization by CKD patients, the investigators propose that the role of nurses could be expanded to support the care of CKD patients in the community. A total of 220 patients will be randomized (1:1) to the intervention or control groups (usual care). The intervention entails enrolment into a nurse-led, physician-supported programme (INTEGREAT-CKD), comprising outpatient consultations and community-based ambulatory monitoring and counselling primarily driven by CKD-trained advanced practice nurses (APNs) and healthcare professionals conducted over 6 months. Patient-reported outcomes like health-related quality of life (HRQOL), as measured by EQ-5D and KDQOL, CKD self-management score and CKD health literacy will be assessed at baseline and after 6 months. The primary outcome is CKD self-management. Other secondary outcomes to be assessed and tracked including achievement of clinical targets relevant to slowing down CKD progression, attainment of CKD best practice guidelines as specified in the KDIGO CKD Evaluation and Management guidelines 2020.
Official title: A Dual-centre, Two-arm, Open-label Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing an Integrated Collaborative Nurse-led Physician-supported Multimorbid Chronic Kidney Disease Care Model Versus Physician-led Care (INTEGREAT-CKD)
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
21 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
220
Start Date
2023-11-01
Completion Date
2026-12-31
Last Updated
2024-04-18
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
INTEGREAT-CKD Intervention
The participant is reviewed once in 12 weeks by a CKD-trained APN, during a 30-minute timeslot, an extended duration compared to the timeslot of 10 to 15 minutes that routinely is designated for a recurrent review of a CKD patient in any restructured hospital in Singapore. The review consists of a 15-minute medical review centred on a discussion of the biochemical reports and clinical data relevant to CKD management, and educating on CKD knowledge and lifestyle modification. Patients self-report the monitored parameters to a community-based nurse through a telehealth AI-based platform. The APN oversees monitoring the community-based parameters and titration of appropriate medications. The APNs have received a Master's in Nursing, with training that is primarily centred on generalist-led care, with additional clinical training in CKD management. They are supported with protocols to detect anomalies in blood pressure trends, glycemia ranges, and abnormalities in fluid status.
Locations (1)
Wei Zhen Hong
Singapore, Singapore