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Title

Effects, costs and implementation of monitoring kidney transplant patients' tacrolimus levels with dried blood spot sampling: A randomized controlled hybrid implementation trial.

Authors

Veenhof, Herman; Boven, Job Frank Martien; Voort, Anna; Berger, Stefan Philip; Bakker, Stephanus Johannes Leonardus; Touw, Daniël Johannes

Abstract

Aims: Dried blood spot (DBS) home sampling allows monitoring creatinine levels and tacrolimus trough levels as an alternative for blood sampling in the hospital, which is important in kidney transplant patient follow‐up. This study aims to assess whether DBS home sampling results in decreased patient travel burden and lower societal costs. Methods: In this single‐centre randomized controlled hybrid implementation trial, adult kidney transplant patients were enrolled. The intervention group (n = 25) used DBS home sampling on top of usual care in the first 6 months after transplantation. The control group (n = 23) received usual care only. The primary endpoint was the number of outpatient visits. Other endpoints were costs per patient, patient satisfaction and implementation. Results: There was no statistically significant difference in the average number of outpatient visits between the DBS group (11.2, standard deviation: 1.7) and the control group (10.9, standard deviation: 1.4; P =.48). Average costs per visit in the DBS group were not significantly different (€542, 95% confidence interval €316–990) compared to the control group (€533, 95% confidence interval €278–1093; P =.66). Most patients (n = 19/23, 82.6%) were willing to perform DBS home‐sampling if this would reduce the number of hospital visits. Only 55.9% (n = 143/256) of the expected DBS samples were received and 1/5 analysed on time (n = 52/256). Conclusion: Adult kidney transplant patients are willing to perform DBS home sampling. However, to decrease patient travel burden and costs in post‐transplant care, optimization of the logistical process concerning mailing and analysis of DBS samples is crucial.

Subjects

KIDNEY transplantation; CREATININE; BLOOD sampling; PATIENT satisfaction; TRAVEL costs; STANDARD deviations

Publication

British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 2020, Vol 86, Issue 7, p1357

ISSN

0306-5251

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1111/bcp.14249

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