Kenya Medical Training College, Nairobi, Kenya.
International Centre for Eye Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, WC1E 7HT, London, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2018 Jul 13;18(1):871. doi: 10.1186/s12889-018-5761-6.
All patients with diabetes are at risk of developing diabetic retinopathy (DR), a progressive and potentially blinding condition. Early treatment of DR prevents visual impairment and blindness. The natural history of DR is that it is asymptomatic until the advanced stages, thus annual retinal examination is recommended for early detection. Previous studies show that the uptake of regular retinal examination among people living with diabetes (PLWD) is low. In the Uptake of Retinal Examination in Diabetes (DURE) study, we will investigate the effectiveness of a complex intervention delivered within diabetes support groups to increase uptake of retinal examination.
The DURE study will be a two-arm pragmatic cluster randomized clinical trial in Kirinyaga County, Kenya. Diabetes support groups will be randomly assigned to either the intervention or usual care conditions in a 1:1 ratio. The participants will be 700 PLWD who are members of support groups in Kirinyaga. To reduce contamination, the unit of randomization will be the support group. Peer supporters in the intervention arm will receive training to deliver the intervention. The intervention will include monthly group education on DR and individual member reminders to take the eye examination. The effectiveness of this intervention plus usual care will be compared to usual care practices alone. Participant data will be collected at baseline. The primary outcome is the proportion of PLWD who take up the eye examination at six months. Secondary outcomes include the characteristics of participants and peer supporters associated with uptake of eye examination for DR. Intention-to-treat analysis will be used to evaluate the primary and secondary outcomes.
Eye care programs need evidence of the effectiveness of peer supporter-led health education to improve attendance to retinal screening for the early detection of DR in an African setting. Given that the intervention combines standardization and flexibility, it has the potential to be adopted in other settings and to inform policies to promote DR screening.
Pan African Clinical Trial Registry PACTR201707002430195 , registered 25 July 2017, www.pactr.org.
所有糖尿病患者都有发生糖尿病视网膜病变(DR)的风险,DR 是一种进行性的、潜在致盲的疾病。早期治疗 DR 可预防视力损害和失明。DR 的自然病程是在晚期才出现无症状,因此建议每年进行视网膜检查以早期发现。先前的研究表明,糖尿病患者(PLWD)定期进行视网膜检查的比例较低。在“糖尿病视网膜检查接受度(DURE)”研究中,我们将研究在糖尿病支持小组中实施的复杂干预措施对提高视网膜检查接受度的有效性。
DURE 研究将是肯尼亚基里尼亚加县的一项两臂实用集群随机临床试验。糖尿病支持小组将以 1:1 的比例随机分配到干预组或常规护理组。参与者将是基里尼亚加支持小组的 700 名 PLWD。为了减少污染,随机分组单位将是支持小组。干预组中的同伴支持者将接受关于 DR 的每月小组教育和对个人成员进行眼部检查的提醒。将这种干预措施加常规护理与单独常规护理实践进行比较。将在基线时收集参与者数据。主要结果是在六个月时接受眼部检查的 PLWD 的比例。次要结果包括与接受 DR 眼部检查相关的参与者和同伴支持者的特征。将采用意向治疗分析来评估主要和次要结果。
眼保健计划需要有证据证明同伴支持主导的健康教育可提高在非洲环境中接受视网膜筛查的比例,以早期发现 DR。鉴于该干预措施结合了标准化和灵活性,它有可能在其他环境中被采用,并为促进 DR 筛查的政策提供信息。
泛非临床试验注册处 PACTR201707002430195,于 2017 年 7 月 25 日注册,www.pactr.org。