The improving Medication Adherence in Adolescents and young adults following Liver Transplantation (iMALT) multisite trial: Design and trial implementation considerations.
Eyal ShemeshSarah Duncan-ParkGeorge MazariegosRachel AnnunziatoRavinder AnandMiguel Reyes-MugicaJeff MitchellBenjamin L Shneidernull nullPublished in: Clinical trials (London, England) (2023)
Improving Medication Adherence in adolescent Liver Transplant includes several innovative design elements. The use of a validated, objective adherence index to survey a large cohort of transplant recipients allows the teams to avoid bias inherent in both convenience sampling and referral-based recruitment and enroll only patients whose computed index indicates substantially increased risk of rejection. The remote intervention paradigm helps to engage patients who are by definition hard to engage. The use of an objective, masked medical (rather than behavioral) outcome measure reduces the likelihood of biases related to clinical information and ensures broad acceptance by the field. Finally, monitoring for potential adverse events related to increased medication exposure due to the adherence intervention acknowledges that a successful intervention (increasing adherence) could have detrimental side effects via increased exposure to and potential toxicity of the medication. Such monitoring is almost never attempted in clinical trials evaluating adherence interventions.
Keyphrases
- clinical trial
- randomized controlled trial
- end stage renal disease
- healthcare
- newly diagnosed
- primary care
- ejection fraction
- peritoneal dialysis
- mental health
- prognostic factors
- young adults
- phase iii
- chronic kidney disease
- type diabetes
- phase ii
- patient reported outcomes
- glycemic control
- emergency department
- skeletal muscle
- climate change
- oxidative stress
- social media
- computed tomography
- cross sectional
- health information
- contrast enhanced