A pilot randomised controlled trial of the Tailored Intervention for people with moderate-to-severe Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Co-morbidities delivered by Pharmacists and Consultant respiratory Physicians (TICC-PCP) (original) (raw)

Lowrie, R. et al. (2025) A pilot randomised controlled trial of the Tailored Intervention for people with moderate-to-severe Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Co-morbidities delivered by Pharmacists and Consultant respiratory Physicians (TICC-PCP).npj Primary Care Respiratory Medicine, 35(1), 46. (doi: 10.1038/s41533-025-00451-9) (PMID:41136398) (PMCID:PMC12552623)

Abstract

To achieve progression criteria for a definitive phase three randomised controlled trial (RCT). Prospective phase two multicentre parallel-group RCT. Participants recruited from secondary care respiratory clinics in two health boards in Scotland, United Kingdom. 110 adults with moderate-severe COPD and co-morbidities. Tailored Intervention for COPD and Co-morbidities by Pharmacists and Consultant Physicians (TICC-PCP): home visits (for a year) by generalist prescribing pharmacists collaborating with consultant respiratory physicians. Pharmacists assessed, prescribed, de-prescribed, and referred participants to health and social care services as appropriate, in addition to Usual Care (UC). Recruit ≥100 participants; deliver TICC-PCP to ≥70% intervention-arm participants; collect ≥90% in-person data; retain ≥80% participants until 21-months. Secondary outcomes include clinical and health service utilisation. Recruitment, data collection, retention and participant retention targets were achieved over 21 months. TICC-PCP delivery: the median number of contacts, nine per participant in one year, matched the a-priori target although fewer than expected (13 (27%)) received the planned schedule of contacts (monthly for six months then every other month for six months). Secondary outcomes included increased prescribing of bone strengthening medicines, de-prescribing of medicines associated with increasing falls risk; delayed time to emergency health care contacts, fewer exacerbations; improved health related quality of life and longer duration of hospitalisation. A definitive phase three RCT of TICC-PCP may improve outcomes for people with moderate-severe COPD and co-morbidities.

Item Type: Articles
Additional Information: This work was supported by Scottish Government Chief Scientist’s Office grant reference HIPS/19/27 and Chiesi Pharmaceuticals (to NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde).
Status: Published
Refereed: Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID: Owusu Achiaw, Dr Samuel and Mair, Professor Frances and Lowrie, Dr Richard and Greenlaw, Miss Nicola and Stanley, Miss Bethany and Scobie, Dr Hannah and McIntosh, Professor Emma and Wood, Miss Karen
Authors: Lowrie, R., Anderson, D., Sheikh, A., Moir, J., McPherson, A., Stanley, B., Cameron, G., Attwood, L., Noble, D., Rankine, E., Anderson, J., Greenlaw, N., Hughes, F., McIntosh, E., Owusu Achiaw, S., Tait, L. A., Wood, K., Scobie, H., and Mair, F. S.
College/School: College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Health & Wellbeing > Health Economics and Health Technology AssessmentCollege of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Health & Wellbeing > General Practice and Primary CareCollege of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Health & Wellbeing > Robertson Centre
Journal Name: npj Primary Care Respiratory Medicine
Publisher: Nature Research
ISSN: 2055-1010
ISSN (Online): 2055-1010
Copyright Holders: Copyright © The Author(s) 2025
First Published: First published in npj Primary Care Respiratory Medicine 35(1):46
Publisher Policy: Reproduced under a Creative Commons licence

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Funder and Project Information

Tailored Intervention for COPD and Co-morbidities by Pharmacists and Consultant Physicians

Frances Mair

GN18RM698 - HIPS/19/27

SHW - General Practice & Primary Care

Deposit and Record Details

ID Code: 370484
Depositing User: Dr Samuel Owusu Achiaw
Datestamp: 30 Oct 2025 14:15
Last Modified: 31 Oct 2025 02:32
Date of acceptance: 7 September 2025
Date Deposited: 30 October 2025
Data Availability Statement: Yes no data confirmed