What type of dialysis modality? |
No. 6 |
Multicentre non-randomised controlled study121
|
Patients with CKD referred for predialysis services |
Total=189
YODDA+standard care=84
Control=105
|
Immediately post-intervention/control: patient and clinical characteristics, illness perception, health-related quality of life, preparation for decision-making
Immediately, and 6 weeks post-intervention/control: how easy were leaflets to read, useful in helping understand kidney disease, dialysis and the decision, sufficient to make a decision, views over control over choice, sharing decisions with spouse/family/health/professionals, knowing other patients’ choices, views of others in decision-making, difficulty in refusing healthcare professional’s recommendation, dialysis choice preference, dialysis and CKD knowledge, perceived seriousness and risk complications of HD and PD, stage of decision-making
6 weeks post-intervention/control: use of YODDA, decisional conflict
|
n.a. |
Patients in the intervention group had higher scores than patients in the control group for understanding kidney disease, reasoning about options, feeling in control and sharing their decision with family
Patients in the intervention group valued receiving the intervention: 96% read it on their own and 72% shared it with family
At 6 weeks follow-up, patients’ dialysis preferences were spread around 50:50 for home and hospital treatment options in both groups
|
No. 7 |
Meeting abstract of pilot study132
|
Patients with an eGFR <30 mL/min/1.73 m2
Providers
|
Total=38 (17 patients) |
Post-intervention: outcomes of acceptability, usability and feasibility of integrating the interventions into existing care models |
n.a. |
Over 95% of participants recommended the option grid and 100% recommended the decision aid
Participants felt more prepared to identify a treatment options after using the option grid
100% of participants agreed that the explanation of the options were clear and relevant
100% of patients reported that the decision aid was relevant and helpful in preparing them to make a decision and plans for next steps
89,5% of providers found the tools helped patients to better participate in decision-making
|
No. 8 |
No.9 |
Mixed methods: development and pilot study122
|
Patients with an eGFR <20 mL/min/1.73 m2
|
Total=137
|
Post-intervention: patient-reported SDM, decisional quality, the patient’s choice of dialysis modality, registration of the dialysis mode for patients starting dialysis |
n.a. |
80% of the patients chose dialysis at home after the intervention; an increase of 23% compared with prior rates
The majority of the patients experienced the intervention as SDM
|
Qualitative study: interviews142
|
Patients with an eGFR <20 mL/min/1.73 m2
|
Total=349
|
Post-intervention: patients’ experiences on the impact of SDM and Dialysis Choice (DC) on their involvement in the decision-making process |
n.a. |
Patients experienced the decisions made as their own
Patients felt the meetings contributed to the decision process
Patients felt SDM-DC contributed to the decision process
Patients experienced the decision process as iterative
|
Mixed methods: questionnaires and interviews143
|
Patients with an eGFR <20 mL/min/1.73 m2
|
Total=349
Questionnaires=148
Interviews=29
|
Post-intervention: patient-reported SDM, decisional quality, results of semi-structured interviews |
n.a. |
The participants obtained a mean score for SDM of 86 out of 100
There was no significant difference between those choosing home-based or hospital-based treatment
Those choosing home-based treatment had higher knowledge scores that those choosing hospital-based treatment (p=0.006)
83% of participants achieved a high-quality decision
No significant differences were found in decision quality between patients choosing home-based or hospital-based treatment
|
Qualitative study: interviews144
|
Patients with an eGFR <20 mL/min/1.73 m2
|
Total=349
|
3 months after dialysis initiation: results of semi-structured interviews |
n.a. |
Patients who had chosen home-based treatment had become more involved in their healthcare
The involvement of relatives and support from healthcare professionals contributed to this increase in self-management
Patients who had chosen hospital-based treatment had become less involved in their healthcare
|
No. 10 |
Mixed methods: development and evaluation123
|
Patients with an eGFR between 10 and 20 mL/min/1.73 m2
|
Total=22 |
Pre-intervention: decisional conflict
Post-intervention: decisional conflict, system usability
|
n.a. |
There was no reduction in decisional conflict after using the intervention
The intervention received a low usability score
|
No. 11 |
RCT124
|
Patients with an eGFR <25 mL/min/1.73 m2
|
Total=133
Choosing dialysis=63
Control=70
|
Pre-intervention/control: treatment preference, decisional conflict, decisional self-efficacy
Immediately post-intervention/control: treatment preference, decisional conflict, decisional self-efficacy
|
Pre-intervention/control: patient characteristics, knowledge, health literacy, health numeracy
Immediately post-intervention/control: preparation for decision-making, knowledge, user experience
|
Decisional conflict scores were significantly lower in the intervention group (p<0.001)
Knowledge scores were significantly higher in the intervention group (p<0.001)
Decisional self-efficacy scores were comparable between the intervention and control groups
Uncertainty about the choice of dialysis treatment decreased from 46% to 16% in the intervention group
>90% of the intervention group reported that the decision aid helped them in decision-making
|
Transplantation or dialysis? |
No. 13 |
Multicentre RCT70
|
Patients with ESKD and on dialysis for <1 year |
Total=470
|
Pre-intervention and immediately post-intervention/control: transplant knowledge |
Pre-intervention/control: patient characteristics
Within 1 year post-intervention/control: >1 living donor inquiry, placement on the kidney transplant waiting list or the receipt of a living or deceased donor transplant
Pre-intervention and immediately post-intervention/control: decisional conflict
Pre-intervention and immediately post-intervention/control: patient treatment preferences
Immediately post-intervention/control: provider use of estimates of patient survival or mortality to communicate risk estimates, discussion of the benefits of transplant versus dialysis and LDKT versus DDKT
|
226 patients in the intervention group completed both the baseline and post-intervention surveys
There was a greater improvement in knowledge score for the intervention group compared with the control group (p<0.0001)
There was no difference in access to transplantation between the intervention and control groups
|
No. 14 |
Mixed methods: development and pilot study125
|
Patients considering renal transplantation |
Total=81 |
Pre-intervention: patient characteristics, previous transplant education, access to and comfort with technology, access to mobile phone with internet or an iPad, comfort with downloading apps, knowledge of transplant options, ability to make an informed decision about ESKD treatment options
Post-intervention: knowledge of transplant options, ability to make an informed decision about ESKD treatment options, acceptability and cultural competence of My Transplant Coach
|
n.a. |
86% of patients reported that the intervention improved their knowledge
67%–85% of patient-reported that the intervention was culturally appropriate for their race/ethnicity
Knowledge scores were significantly higher in patients after the intervention (p<0.001), including in patients with low health literary scores
|
No. 16 |
Meeting abstract of prospective cohort study135
|
Patients
Healthcare professionals
|
Total=293 (176 patients) |
Post-intervention: patient-reported SDM, SDM awareness and use of the Option grid: KRT, the Dutch Kidney Guide and the Option grid: KRT versus CCM by healthcare professionals |
n.a. |
12 centres (2 academic, 10 non-academic) participated in the study
When centres with the worst scores for SDM were compared with centres with the best scores for SDM, a difference was noticed in the use of the decision aids (50% vs 100%)
Overall, no significant differences between centres in the scores for SDM were found
56% of the professionals believed SDM was applied, but only 31%–33% of clinicians used the Option grid: KRT and the Option grid: KRT versus CCM. The Dutch Kidney Guide was used by 51%
|
Accept or decline IRD kidney offer? |
No. 17 |
RCT126
|
Kidney transplant candidates |
Total=288
Inform me=133
Control=155
|
Immediately and at 1 week post-intervention/control: IRD knowledge kidneys, willingness to accept an IRD kidney offer, experiences with Inform Me |
Pre-intervention/control: patient characteristics, health literacy, health numeracy |
105 patients in the intervention group completed both the baseline and post-intervention surveys
Patients in the intervention group had significantly higher knowledge scores immediately after the intervention compared with patients in the control group (p<0.001)
Patients in the intervention group had significantly higher knowledge scores 1 week after the intervention compared with patients in the control group (p<0.001)
These was no difference in the willingness to accept an IRD kidney offer between the groups
|
Dialysis or CCM? |
No. 18 |
RCT127
|
Patients >70 years of age with AKD |
Total=41
|
1 month and 3 months post-intervention/control: decisional regret, decisional conflict |
Pre-intervention/control: patient and clinical characteristics
1 month post-intervention/control: knowledge, preparation for decision-making
1 and 3 months post-intervention/control: clinical characteristics health-related quality of life
|
There were no significant differences in decision conflict, decision regret or health-related quality of life between the intervention and control group
The intervention group had a significantly better improvement in knowledge score than the control group (p<0.001)
The intervention was helpful in preparing patients to make a treatment decision
|
No. 21 |
Multicentre RCT129
|
Patients >65 years of age with an eGFR <25 mL/min/1.73 m2
|
Total=104
|
Pre-intervention and post-intervention/control: supportive kidney care knowledge |
Pre-intervention/control: patient characteristics, health literacy
Pre-intervention and post-intervention: preference for KRT
Post-intervention: satisfaction with and acceptability of the intervention
|
50 patients in the intervention group completed both the baseline and the post-intervention surveys
Knowledge of supportive kidney care increased significantly after education among all participants (p<0.001)
There were no differences in knowledge between the intervention and the control group
There were no differences in preference for supportive kidney care between the intervention and the control group
96% of patients were comfortable with watching the video
96% of patients felt that the content of the video was helpful
96% of the patients reported they would recommend the video to others
|
Transplantation, dialysis or CCM? |
No. 22 |
Mixed methods: development and evaluation130
|
Patients with an eGFR <20 mL/min/1.73 m2
|
Total=65 |
Pre-intervention and 2 months post-intervention: decisional quality |
n.a. |
39 patients completed the both the baseline and post-intervention surveys
Comparison of the decisional quality at baseline and follow-up showed improvements in patients’ overall knowledge on their treatment options
Comparison of the decisional quality at baseline and follow-up showed improvements in patients’ readiness to decide on a treatment option
|
No. 24 |
Multicentre RCT145
|
Self-reported African-Americans with ESKD <2 years |
Total=92
|
1, 3 and 6 months post-intervention/control: discussing LDKT with family members, discussing LDKT with their doctor, initiation of the recipient medical evaluation for LDKT, completion of the recipient evaluation for LDKT, identification of a potential live kidney donor, participants beliefs about kidney transplant and their concerns about LDKT |
Pre-intervention/control: patient and clinical characteristics, experiences with HD care, prior preparation for KRT or LDKT, perceived involvement in kidney treatment decisions, concerns regarding LDKT
1, 3 and 6 months post-intervention: fidelity and usefulness, whether participants shared the donor financial assistance programme with family members or friends
|
62% of participants in the intervention groups reported that it helped them their decision-making about KRT
There were no significant improvements in LDKT action in both groups over 6 months
There were no participants that used the living donor financial assistance programme
|
No. 25 |
Multicentre pre-post study178
|
Patients referred for ESKD education |
Total=97 |
Pre-intervention and post-intervention: patient characteristics, knowledge, worries, values and decision-making experience with the decision-aid, experienced education-methods, utilisation level of the decision-aid, whether decision-making involved significant others, ranking of preferred treatment options |
n.a. |
72 patients completed the both the baseline and post-intervention surveys
Knowledge levels increased significantly after the intervention (p<0.001)
Worry and flexibility scores all increased significantly after the intervention (p<0.05)
This preliminary assessment revealed high patient acceptance and usability of the intervention
|
No. 26 |
Meeting abstract of prospective cohort study135
|
Patients
Healthcare professionals
|
Total=293 (176 patients) |
Post-intervention: patient-reported shared decision-making, SDM awareness and use of the Option grid: KRT, the Dutch Kidney Guide and the Option grid: KRT versus CCM by healthcare professionals |
n.a. |
12 centres (2 academic, 10 non-academic) participated in the study
When centres with the worst scores for SDM were compared with centres with the best scores for SDM, a difference was noticed in the use of the decision aids (50% vs 100%)
Overall, no significant differences between centres in the scores for SDM were found
56% of the professionals believed SDM was applied but only 31%–33% of clinicians used the Option grid: KRT and the Option grid: KRT versus CCM. The Dutch Kidney Guide was used by 51%
|
No. 27 |