Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Active, not recruiting

Summary

Conditions
  • End Stage Renal Disease
  • Kidney Diseases
  • Kidney Failure
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentMasking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Health Services Research

Participation Requirements

Age
Younger than 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Statement of the health problem or issue: Compared with dialysis, a kidney transplant offers patients a better quality of life and many gain 10 or more years of life expectancy. A transplant also costs the healthcare system less-over a five-year period. Living donor transplants offer further advanta...

Statement of the health problem or issue: Compared with dialysis, a kidney transplant offers patients a better quality of life and many gain 10 or more years of life expectancy. A transplant also costs the healthcare system less-over a five-year period. Living donor transplants offer further advantages, including superior graft and patient survival compared with deceased donor transplants. Unfortunately, many patients with kidney failure who would benefit from a transplant will never receive one. There is a chronic shortage of organs from deceased donors, and in Canada, the rate of living donor kidney transplantation has stagnated. In addition to the shortage of transplantable kidneys, several other barriers impede patient access to transplantation. Objective of your project: To determine if a quality improvement intervention provided in chronic kidney disease (CKD) programs (vs. usual care) enables more patients with no recorded contraindications to kidney transplant to complete more steps towards receiving a kidney transplant. How will you undertake your work? We will conduct a pragmatic two-arm, parallel-group, open-label, registry-based, cluster-randomized clinical trial-the Enhance Access to Kidney Transplantation and Living Kidney Donation (EnAKT LKD) trial. Our study will include the 26 chronic kidney disease (CKD) programs in Ontario, Canada which are expected to care for over 10,000 adult patients with CKD (including patients approaching the need for dialysis and patients receiving dialysis) with no recorded contraindications to a kidney transplant during the trial. Patients in 13 of the 26 CKD programs will receive a quality improvement intervention or usual care. The intervention has four main components: (1) local quality improvement teams and administrative support; (2) tailored education and resources for staff, patients, and living kidney donor candidates; (3) support from kidney transplant recipients and living kidney donors; and (4) program-level performance reports and oversight by program leaders. Patients in the other 13 programs will receive usual care and will continue to support access to kidney transplantation and living kidney donation as usual. What is unique/innovative about your project? An investigator usually needs to study a large number of patients in a clinical trial to reliably understand the effects of a treatment. Normally, a study with 10,000 patients would cost more than $10 million dollars to conduct; however, this study will provide a reliable answer to the question being asked and can be done at a fraction of the cost. This is because we will use data already collected by the healthcare system. The investigator will be able to analyze these healthcare data at the end of the study. This means that the study will cost less than a traditional clinical trial. This pragmatic trial includes all CKD programs in the province of Ontario. By including patients from a variety of backgrounds, the results of the trial should be broadly generalizable. What is the impact of the proposed research? The EnAKT LKD trial will provide high-quality evidence on whether a multi-component quality improvement intervention helps patients complete more steps towards receiving a kidney transplant. This is important as compared to dialysis, kidney transplant offers patients a better quality of life and many gain 10 or more years of life expectancy. A transplant also costs the healthcare system less. If our intervention is successful, more transplants may ultimately be performed and result in improved survival and a better quality of life for patients with CKD. Kidney transplantation achieves the triple aim in healthcare: better outcomes, better experience of care, and lower costs.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT03329521
Collaborators
  • Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
  • Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  • Ontario Renal Network (part of Ontario Health)
  • Trillium Gift of Life Network (part of Ontario Health)
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Amit Garg, MD, PhD London Health Sciences Centre