dc.description.abstract | Background: Multiple sclerosis is a chronic neurological condition usually starting in early adulthood and regularly
leading to severe disability. Immunotherapy options are growing in number and complexity, while costs of treatments
are high and adherence rates remain low. Therefore, treatment decision-making has become more complex for patients.
Structured decision coaching, based on the principles of evidence-based patient information and shared decision-making,
has the potential to facilitate participation of individuals in the decision-making process.
This cluster randomised controlled trial follows the assumption that decision coaching by trained nurses, using
evidence-based patient information and preference elicitation, will facilitate informed choices and induce higher decision
quality, as well as better decisional adherence.
<p>Methods/Design: The decision coaching programme will be evaluated through an evaluator-blinded superiority cluster
randomised controlled trial, including 300 patients with suspected or definite relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, facing
an immunotherapy decision. The clusters are 12 multiple sclerosis outpatient clinics in Germany. Further, the trial will be
accompanied by a mixed-methods process evaluation and a cost-effectiveness study.
Nurses in the intervention group will be trained in shared decision-making, coaching, and evidence-based patient
information principles. Patients who meet the inclusion criteria will receive decision coaching (intervention group) with
up to three face-to-face coaching sessions with a trained nurse (decision coach) or counselling as usual (control group).
Patients in both groups will be given access to an evidence-based online information tool.
The primary outcome is ‘informed choice’ after six months, assessed with the multi-dimensional measure of informed
choice including the sub-dimensions risk knowledge (questionnaire), attitude concerning immunotherapy (questionnaire),
and immunotherapy uptake (telephone survey). Secondary outcomes include decisional conflict, adherence to
immunotherapy decisions, autonomy preference, planned behaviour, coping self-efficacy, and perceived involvement
in coaching and decisional encounters. Safety outcomes are comprised of anxiety and depression and disease-specific
quality of life.
<p>Discussion: This trial will assess the effectiveness of a new model of patient decision support concerning
MS-immunotherapy options. The delegation of treatment information provision from physicians to trained nurses
bears the potential to change current doctor-focused practice in Germany. | en_US |