Loading clinical trials...
Loading clinical trials...
Identification of Fatty Liver With Advanced Fibrosis in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes Using Simple Fibrosis Scores and Electronic Reminder Messages: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is currently the most common chronic liver disease worldwide and is a major cause of cirrhosis and liver cancer in Western countries. Because of its close association with obesity and diabetes, most patients are seen by primary care physicians and endocrinologists rather than hepatologists. Previous studies have shown that NAFLD is under-recognized outside specialist settings. As a result, many patients are undiagnosed and not receiving specific treatments. With this background, we aim to test the hypothesis that the use of simple fibrosis scores as part of a diabetes complications screening program followed by electronic reminder messages is more effective than usual care in prompting physicians to correctly identify patients with suspected NAFLD and advanced liver fibrosis for specialist referral or further liver assessment. Our secondary aim is to test the hypothesis that the use of fibrosis scores and electronic reminder messages can increase the number of patients with confirmed diagnosis of advanced liver fibrosis.
This will be a parallel group, randomized controlled trial. Patients fulfilling the inclusion and exclusion criteria above will be randomized 1:1 to two groups. Randomization will be carried out through the use of computer-generated list of random numbers in variable blocks of 4 to 10. Concealment of group allocation will be achieved through putting the group allocation cards in consecutively-numbered and sealed envelopes. The patients and physicians will know that the patients are in the intervention group if they see the reminder messages. When they do not see a reminder message, there will not be a specific indicator of whether the patient is in the control group or in the intervention group but having low fibrosis scores. Furthermore, the outcome assessors will be blinded to the group assignment. For patients in the intervention group, we will calculate the fibrosis scores. For patients with increased fibrosis scores, we will type the following pop-up message in our electronic clinical management system: "This patient has high Fibrosis-4 index (and/or AST-to-platelet ratio index) of xxx suggestive of significant liver fibrosis. Please consider referring the patient to the hepatology clinic or arranging further test such as FibroScan." The reminder message will pop up when physicians see the patient at the clinic and use the electronic clinical management system. The message will remain active for one year. Although the message is entered manually at this stage, the arrangement mimics an automated computer system. If the study results are positive, the next step is to modify the system to automate the process. Patients in the control group will undergo the same assessments as patients in the intervention group. Although physicians will have access to the raw liver biochemistry results and platelet count, the fibrosis score results will not be specifically shown, and there will be no electronic reminder messages regardless of the fibrosis scores. This is to mimic usual care when there is no dedicated care model for case identification.
Age
18 - 70 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Prince of Wales Hospital
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Start Date
May 19, 2020
Primary Completion Date
October 31, 2022
Completion Date
January 31, 2023
Last Updated
August 9, 2024
1,061
ACTUAL participants
Simple fibrosis scores and electronic reminder messages
DIAGNOSTIC_TEST
Lead Sponsor
Chinese University of Hong Kong
NCT06959901
NCT06574035
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Modifications: This data has been reformatted for display purposes. Eligibility criteria have been parsed into inclusion/exclusion sections. Location data has been geocoded to enable distance-based search. For the authoritative and most current information, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
Neither the United States Government nor Clareo Health make any warranties regarding the data. Check ClinicalTrials.gov frequently for updates.
View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT06861062