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Trial registered on ANZCTR
Registration number
ACTRN12624000205538
Ethics application status
Approved
Date submitted
18/01/2024
Date registered
1/03/2024
Date last updated
30/06/2024
Date data sharing statement initially provided
1/03/2024
Type of registration
Prospectively registered
Titles & IDs
Public title
Post-discharge nutrition care post hip fracture: a feasibility study
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Scientific title
Post-discharge nutrition care in older adults with or at risk of malnutrition and frailty post hip fracture: a pre-post feasibility study
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Secondary ID [1]
311339
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Nil known
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Universal Trial Number (UTN)
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Trial acronym
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Linked study record
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Health condition
Health condition(s) or problem(s) studied:
Malnourished
332596
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Frail
332598
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Hip fracture
332599
0
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Condition category
Condition code
Diet and Nutrition
329295
329295
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0
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Other diet and nutrition disorders
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Injuries and Accidents
329479
329479
0
0
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Fractures
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Musculoskeletal
329480
329480
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0
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Other muscular and skeletal disorders
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Intervention/exposure
Study type
Interventional
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Description of intervention(s) / exposure
Once recruited, patients will be enrolled in the study and given an identification (ID) number. They will be sequentially recruited into the control group (pre-implementation phase) and intervention groups (implementation phase). The first 70 patients will be recruited into the control group and the following 70 will be recruited into the intervention group).
Intervention: Patients in the intervention (implementation phase) group will receive usual care which includes:
- Timely surgery
- Orthogeriatric co-care
- Multidisciplinary, multimodal inpatient nutrition care, including:
o Nutrition assessment
o High protein/energy diet choices
o High protein/energy dietary advice
o High protein/energy oral nutrition supplements
o Medical management of nutrition impacting symptoms
o Mealtime assistance and support
o Coordination of care including consideration of post-discharge oral nutrition supplements and/or Meals on Wheels, referral to primary care provider including discharge summary with nutrition status / nutrition care plan documented.
Plus in-kind provision of home delivery of Lite-n-Easy full meal package (3 meals/day for 8 weeks) post hospital discharge, per standard processes defined by Lite-n-Easy:
- Provision of patient-selected breakfast, lunch and dinner meals from the ‘My Choice’ protein- and energy-dense range (details found at https://www.liteneasy.com.au/my-choice)
- Weekly contact from the Lite-n-Easy call centre regarding meal plan choices for the following week and/or any issues regarding products or delivery; and
- To- or in-house delivery as per the individual’s preference.
Participants are permitted to consume meals outside of the provisions from Lite-n-Easy. Food intake will not be supervised, however food intake will be collected at 4-weeks and 8-weeks post discharge, using a 24hr recall methodology. No other strategies will be used to monitor intake or adherence to meals.
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Intervention code [1]
327782
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Lifestyle
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Intervention code [2]
327907
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Treatment: Other
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Intervention code [3]
327908
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Rehabilitation
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Comparator / control treatment
Once recruited, patients will be enrolled in the study and given an identification (ID) number. They will be sequentially recruited into the control group (pre-implementation phase) and intervention groups (implementation phase). The first 70 patients will be recruited into the control group and the following 70 will be recruited into the intervention group).
Control: Patients in the control (pre-implementation phase) group will receive usual care, which includes:
- Timely surgery
- Orthogeriatric co-care
- Multidisciplinary, multimodal inpatient nutrition care, including:
o Nutrition assessment
o High protein/energy diet choices
o High protein/energy dietary advice
o High protein/energy oral nutrition supplements
o Medical management of nutrition impacting symptoms
o Mealtime assistance and support
o Coordination of care including consideration of post-discharge oral nutrition supplements and/or Meals on Wheels, referral to primary care provider including discharge summary with nutrition status / nutrition care plan documented.
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Control group
Active
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Outcomes
Primary outcome [1]
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Feasibility of intervention (composite primary outcomes)
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Assessment method [1]
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Delivery: Pre-implementation phase: % receiving home-delivered pre-prepared meals (Lite-n-Easy, Meals-on-Wheels, family/carers, other), collected via participant surveys. Implementation phase: % of intervention meals consistent with patient’s choice, % patients receiving weekly call centre phone call, field notes on any aspect of intervention meal delivery (including adaptations). Collected via participants surveys and Lite n easy records.
Adherence: Pre-implementation phase: 24-hour patient dietary recall
Implementation phase: Control + average % meal consumption (quartiles; patient self-reported). Collected via participant surveys.
Acceptability: Semi-structured interviews with a subset of patient participants. Interviews will continue until data saturation is reached (expected to be ~10-20 patients). Conducted by co-principal investigator.
Implementation / sustainability: Semi-structured interviews with health care providers. Interviews will continue until data saturation is reached (expected to be 10-20 staff). Conducted by co-principal investigator.
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Timepoint [1]
337110
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All delivery & adherence outcomes collected at timepoint 2 (4 weeks post hospital discharge), and timepoint 3 (8 weeks post hospital discharge).
All acceptability & implementation / sustainability outcomes collected between timepoint 3 and timepoint 4 (12 months post hospital discharge).
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Primary outcome [2]
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Feasibility of the evaluation design (composite primary outcomes)
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Assessment method [2]
337111
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Recruitment: Recruitment log recording number of patients eligible, approached, consented, and declined to determine % of eligible patients who are approached consent to participate in the study. Collected via study records participant log.
Retention: Participant log recording number of patients withdrawn/ lost to follow up and why, to determine % of recruited patients still living who reach the intervention end point. Collected via study records participant log.
Data collection: Percent of outcome data collected/available for analysis, to determine % of completing patients have all outcome data available/collected for analysis. Collected via study records participant log.
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Timepoint [2]
337111
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All recruitment outcomes collected at timepoint 1 (Baseline (within 5 days pre- or post-hospital discharge; in person or via phone)).
All retention outcomes collected at timepoints 1 (Baseline (within 5 days pre- or post-hospital discharge; in person or via phone), 2 (4 weeks post hospital discharge), 3 (8 weeks post hospital discharge), 4 (12 months post hospital discharge).
All data collection outcomes collected at timepoints 1 (Baseline (within 5 days pre- or post-hospital discharge; in person or via phone), 2 (4 weeks post hospital discharge), 3 (8 weeks post hospital discharge), 4 (12 months post hospital discharge).
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Secondary outcome [1]
430757
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Patient-reported quality of life
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Assessment method [1]
430757
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EQ-5D-5L Australian version for interviewer administration
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Timepoint [1]
430757
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Timepoints 1 (Baseline (within 5 days pre- or post-hospital discharge; in person or via phone), 3 (8 weeks post hospital discharge), and 4 (12 months post hospital discharge).
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Secondary outcome [2]
430758
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Patient Reported Experience Measures, using a questionnaire developed by the research team regarding satisfaction, meal preparation and intake/appetite.
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Assessment method [2]
430758
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Patient Reported Experience measure questions developed by research team
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Timepoint [2]
430758
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Timepoint 3 (8 weeks post hospital discharge)
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Secondary outcome [3]
430759
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BMI and weight
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Assessment method [3]
430759
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BMI calculated by weight divided by height squared. Weight (in kg) reported by participants using scales at home or in the community (e.g. GP).
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Timepoint [3]
430759
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Timepoints 1 (Baseline (within 5 days pre- or post-hospital discharge; in person or via phone), 3 (8 weeks post hospital discharge), and 4 (12 months post hospital discharge).
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Secondary outcome [4]
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Physical function
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Assessment method [4]
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New Mobility Score
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Timepoint [4]
430760
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Timepoints 1 (Baseline (within 5 days pre- or post-hospital discharge; in person or via phone), 3 (8 weeks post hospital discharge), and 4 (12 months post hospital discharge).
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Secondary outcome [5]
430761
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Nutritional outcomes
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Assessment method [5]
430761
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Mini Nutritional Assessment Short Form
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Timepoint [5]
430761
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Timepoints 1 (Baseline (within 5 days pre- or post-hospital discharge; in person or via phone), 3 (8 weeks post hospital discharge), and 4 (12 months post hospital discharge).
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Secondary outcome [6]
430762
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Place of residency at 12months
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Assessment method [6]
430762
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Patient records
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Timepoint [6]
430762
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Timepoint 4 (12 months post hospital discharge)
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Secondary outcome [7]
430763
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12-month mortality
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Assessment method [7]
430763
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Accessed via QLD Health Statistical Services Branch
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Timepoint [7]
430763
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Timepoint 4 (12 months post hospital discharge)
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Secondary outcome [8]
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Likelihood of cost effectiveness
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Assessment method [8]
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Incremental net monetary benefit calculated by: Costs related to the intervention (or usual care in the case of the comparator), and cost savings resulting from subsequent changes in health service utilisation. Quality adjusted life years using an area under the curve approach based on participant responses to the EQ-5D-5L health-related quality of life utility instrument (as per above)) multiplied by the willingness to pay threshold value (base case of $50, 000).
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Timepoint [8]
430764
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Timepoint 4 (12 months post hospital discharge)
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Secondary outcome [9]
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Public hospital usage (public hospital emergency and inpatient admissions, outpatient utilisation)
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Assessment method [9]
431338
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Accessed via QLD Health Statistical Services Branch
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Timepoint [9]
431338
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Timepoint 4 (12 months post hospital discharge)
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Eligibility
Key inclusion criteria
(a) =/>65 years; (b) able to provide informed consent (cognitively intact, able to communicate in English); (c) admitted to study site Hip Fracture Unit with hip fracture, proximal femur fracture or peri-prosthetic fracture undergoing surgical intervention and discharged directly home or transferred internally to study site Rehabilitation or GEM Units with aim for home discharge; (d) being discharged to their own home and identified as having to contribute to their own meal preparation following hospital discharge; and (e) remain diagnosed as frail or pre-frail, and malnourished or at risk of malnutrition as assessed using the Mini Nutritional Assessment Short Form within 5 days of discharge
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Minimum age
65
Years
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Maximum age
No limit
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Sex
Both males and females
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Can healthy volunteers participate?
No
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Key exclusion criteria
(a) critical or terminal illness; (b) metastatic bone disease or pathological fracture; (c) food allergies, no microwave, inadequate freezer space, not consenting to weekly delivery, or not consenting to phone contact provision to vendor to coordinate supply of meals (intervention group only); (d) ASA score 5; (e) living >50km travel distance from study site; or (f) primary treating geriatrician recommended patient not for inclusion
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Study design
Purpose of the study
Treatment
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Allocation to intervention
Non-randomised trial
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Procedure for enrolling a subject and allocating the treatment (allocation concealment procedures)
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Methods used to generate the sequence in which subjects will be randomised (sequence generation)
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Masking / blinding
Open (masking not used)
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Who is / are masked / blinded?
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Intervention assignment
Other
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Other design features
The study will have a pre-implementation phase where all the participants are allocated to the control group. At the time of completing recruitment to this group (aiming for 70 eligible and consenting participants) the implementation phase will then follow. The implementation phase will allocate all the following participants to the intervention group, (aiming for 70 eligible and consenting participants) at which point recruitment for the study will be completed (aiming for a total of 140 eligible and consenting participants).
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Phase
Not Applicable
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Type of endpoint/s
Efficacy
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Statistical methods / analysis
Sample size: A convenience sample for feasibility testing suggests between 25 and 75 patients per group is likely to be adequate to support feasibility evaluation and sample size calculation for a larger trial. Applying findings from a previous study reporting quality of life in older patients receiving post-discharge meal support, a minimum sample of 64 patients per group is considered appropriate (power 0.8, significance 0.05) to demonstrate a 0.1 (SD 0.2) point difference in quality of life at completion of the pilot RCT. Assuming a 10% drop-out rate, this yields a recommended final pilot RCT sample size of 70 patients per group. As the study site hip fracture service admitted >700 patients with surgical intervention in 2022, with around 240 of those potentially being eligible, a pragmatic approach supports recruitment of 70 patients per group which is expected to be undertaken over a 6–12-month period, dependent on the consent rate. This also aligns with available funding.
Patient and health care worker interviews will be sampled for maximum variation. These will continue until data saturation is reached (or a maximum of 25 patients or 30 health care workers).
Data analysis and statistical considerations: Feasibility outcome data will be reported descriptively (intervention feasibility) and against the pre-determined feasibility criteria (evaluation design feasibility).
Demographic data will be presented descriptively. Continuous data will be presented as mean ±SD (or median and interquartile range for non-normally distributed data). Categorial data will be presented as frequency and percent. Comparisons within and across individuals and groups over time will be made using t-tests or appropriate non-parametric equivalent for continuous data. Chi-squared/exact tests will be used to identify significant differences or associations between categorical variables. Univariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses will be applied to identify the likelihood of patients with improved quality of life, and separately for secondary outcome measures, after adjusting for age, gender, and clinical variables of interest. All data analysis will have input from the research team and reviewed by the study team’s biostatistician.
Qualitative interview data will be thematically analysed using inductive (patient interviews) and deductive (health care worker interviews) methods. A mixed methods approach may be applied to synthesize qualitative and quantitative data.
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Recruitment
Recruitment status
Recruiting
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Date of first participant enrolment
Anticipated
4/03/2024
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Actual
18/03/2024
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Date of last participant enrolment
Anticipated
10/02/2025
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Actual
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Date of last data collection
Anticipated
27/02/2026
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Actual
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Sample size
Target
140
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Accrual to date
22
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Final
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Recruitment in Australia
Recruitment state(s)
QLD
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Recruitment hospital [1]
26027
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The Prince Charles Hospital - Chermside
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Recruitment postcode(s) [1]
41873
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4032 - Chermside
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Funding & Sponsors
Funding source category [1]
315593
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Commercial sector/Industry
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Name [1]
315593
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Lite n Easy
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Address [1]
315593
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18 Buchanan Rd, Banyo QLD 4014
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Country [1]
315593
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Australia
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Funding source category [2]
315595
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Hospital
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Name [2]
315595
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The Prince Charles Hospital
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Address [2]
315595
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627 Rode Rd, Chermside QLD 4032
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Country [2]
315595
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Australia
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Primary sponsor type
University
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Name
Griffith University
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Address
170 Kessels Road, Nathan, QLD, 4111
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Country
Australia
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Secondary sponsor category [1]
317690
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None
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Name [1]
317690
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Address [1]
317690
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Country [1]
317690
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Ethics approval
Ethics application status
Approved
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Ethics committee name [1]
314484
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Metro North Health HREC
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Ethics committee address [1]
314484
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The Prince Charles Hospital, Building 14, Rode Road CHERMSIDE QLD 4032
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Ethics committee country [1]
314484
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Australia
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Date submitted for ethics approval [1]
314484
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02/05/2023
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Approval date [1]
314484
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18/07/2023
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Ethics approval number [1]
314484
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HREC/2023/MNHB/97073
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Ethics committee name [2]
314486
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Griffith University HREC
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Ethics committee address [2]
314486
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170 Kessels Road Nathan QLD 4111
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Ethics committee country [2]
314486
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Australia
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Date submitted for ethics approval [2]
314486
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23/08/2023
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Approval date [2]
314486
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05/09/2023
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Ethics approval number [2]
314486
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2023/704
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Summary
Brief summary
Malnutrition is common among hip fracture patients and results in adverse outcomes. The primary aim of this study is to assess the feasibility of intervention delivery and evaluation design in preparation for a larger trial to determine whether providing high energy, high protein meals to older patients following hospitalisation for hip fracture improves patient reported measures and health related outcomes. Primary outcomes relate to feasibility of the intervention and evaluation design. Secondary outcomes include quality of life, patient-reported experience measures, nutritional, functional and health outcomes, and likelihood of cost-effectiveness. This study has potential to improve quality of life and other health outcomes post hospitalisation for hip fracture. If the intervention is shown to be feasible to deliver and evaluate, further research will assess clinical and cost effectiveness.
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Trial website
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Trial related presentations / publications
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Public notes
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Contacts
Principal investigator
Name
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Miss Alita Rushton
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Address
131750
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Griffith University, Gold Coast campus Parklands Drive Southport Qld 4222
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Country
131750
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Australia
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Phone
131750
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+61 07 31396172
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Fax
131750
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Email
131750
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[email protected]
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Contact person for public queries
Name
131751
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Jack Bell
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Address
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The Prince Charles Hospital, Rode Rd, Chermside QLD 4032
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Country
131751
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Australia
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Phone
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+61 07 31396172
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Fax
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Email
131751
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[email protected]
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Contact person for scientific queries
Name
131752
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Jack Bell
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Address
131752
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The Prince Charles Hospital, Rode Rd, Chermside QLD 4032
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Country
131752
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Australia
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Phone
131752
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+61 07 31396172
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Fax
131752
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Email
131752
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[email protected]
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Data sharing statement
Will individual participant data (IPD) for this trial be available (including data dictionaries)?
No
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No/undecided IPD sharing reason/comment
Due to the commercial partnership within this study and ethics processes IPD will not be shared.
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What supporting documents are/will be available?
No Supporting Document Provided
Results publications and other study-related documents
Documents added manually
No documents have been uploaded by study researchers.
Documents added automatically
No additional documents have been identified.
Download to PDF