e-Health: Scaling Up: A Multi-Site Trial of e-SBI for Alcohol Use in Pregnancy

Sponsor
Michigan State University (Other)
Overall Status
Not yet recruiting
CT.gov ID
NCT04332172
Collaborator
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) (NIH), University of Massachusetts, Worcester (Other)
384
1
6
26.5
14.5

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

The purpose of this research study is to find out if pregnant women screening positive for alcohol risk like the brief alcohol intervention application that the investigators have developed (called the MommyCheckup, which is a technology-delivered SBIRT, or e-SBIRT), and if it helps them to reduce alcohol use. The investigators also wish to test whether e-SBIRT effects can be enhanced by booster sessions and/or tailored text messages.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Other: General information
  • Behavioral: Baseline brief intervention
  • Behavioral: Remote online booster sessions
  • Behavioral: SMS
N/A

Detailed Description

This factorial trial will include 384 participants. Participants will be pregnant women age 18-35 years who score positive on a frequently used and well-validated screening tool for alcohol use risk in pregnancy (the T-ACE). We will also add an additional requirement of either drinking weekly or more in the past month, or having 4 or more drinks at a time at least monthly in the 12 months before becoming pregnant. To be eligible for the study, participants must also report smartphone ownership, willingness to receive study-related text messages and to use their smartphone for study-related assessments and/or booster sessions, and being at 20 weeks gestation or less. Participants will be excluded if they are not planning to carry the pregnancy to term, or are unable to communicate in English. All participants must reside in Connecticut, Massachusetts, or Michigan. Completion of the baseline assessment is also necessary for inclusion.

Participants will be recruited via community flyers as well as by online posts, flyers, and other advertising via multiple digital platforms that may appear as banners, text, images, video, and/or URL links to the study website, which further links to the screening survey.. The flyers and ads will contain basic information indicating that they are for a health-related study for women 18-35 years of age who can communicate in English. Interested women meeting these criteria will be provided a website address, QR code, or link to a study website, where they will be presented with an electronic information sheet, which they may access via their own smartphone or tablet. Those who click "I agree" at the end of this information sheet, will be invited to complete the initial computer-directed screening survey via a link from the study website to a Qualtrics survey. This survey will ask a range of questions so that the study's inclusion and exclusion criteria are not readily apparent (in order to limit fraud).

The screening survey will be used to determine whether initial inclusion criteria have been met [(age, state of residence, pregnancy status, and alcohol risk (T-ACE positive and either drinking weekly or more in the past month, or having 4 or more drinks at a time at least monthly in the 12 months before becoming pregnant)]. Study staff will contact interested women who meet study inclusion criteria by phone in order to validate their eligibility (survey completed by a real person, who can communicate in English, has a working smartphone, is able to receive text messages, and understands study requirements). The following strategies will be implemented to reduce the possibility of fraudulent participation: 1) manual review of IP addresses to screen for duplicates and identify addresses of non-US origin, detect fraudulent completion (e.g., bots), 2) manual review of Qualtrics survey data to detect suspicious response times (e.g., completing the survey too quickly), unusual patterns in responses, respondent names, respondent email addresses, and patterned completion timestamps indicating that one person/bot is completing the survey repeatedly until eligible, 3) inclusion of a required open-ended narrative response to detect fraudulent completion, and 4) inclusion of invisible questions that only a bot could respond to, as well as visible nonsense questions directing the respondent to provide a particular answer. Only interested women who pass these screens and can be confirmed via the phone call will be enrolled.

The full trial consent will also be presented electronically and will proceed only if participants provide written informed consent via e-signature (using DocuSign, see section 10.1.3 of the protocol for additional information). Participants who meet all eligibility criteria and who provide consent will then be randomly assigned to a study condition during the baseline assessment. The staff member who enrolls the participant will not have access to the assigned condition/content at the time of consent and initial study condition assignment.

This trial includes varying levels of two separate interventions. The interactive and tailored baseline MommyCheckup single-session e-SBIRT was built on principles of Motivational Interviewing and Self-Determination Theory, and is presented to participants directly via their own electronic device (e.g., smartphone, tablet), which interacts with them through an animated talking narrator. The e-SBIRT booster sessions will be sent to participants as a text message that includes a link to the booster content. Participants will be texted these links on two occasions: 6 weeks following the baseline session, and at 30 weeks gestation. Participants assigned to the text messaging intervention will receive a test message at the conclusion of their baseline session, in order to confirm that the software has the correct cellphone number. These participants will then begin receiving text messages twice weekly until after the 34-week assessment, or until they text back "STOP" to end the messages.

Following the baseline session, participants will be asked to complete follow-up assessments at 4 weeks post-baseline, at 27 weeks gestation, 34 weeks gestation, and at 4 weeks postpartum. In addition, all participants will be mailed a nail specimen collection kit at 36 weeks gestation asking them to provide nail clippings that will be analyzed for Ethyl Glucuronide (EtG). Fingernails will be collected at 36 weeks gestation. Toenails may be collected at 38 weeks gestation as an alternative to fingernails. Nail types may not be mixed for a single specimen collection. Specimens from all available fingernails or toenails weighing 50-100 mg gathered at 36 weeks (fingernails) or 38 weeks (toenails) will allow for sufficient nail growth to capture EtG as evidence of alcohol use concentrated in the timeframe of approximately 20-34 weeks gestation, based on typical fingernail and toenail growth rates. Additionally, this timeframe will allow us to avoid detecting post-delivery alcohol use since it takes approximately two weeks for fingernails and four weeks for toenails to grow sufficiently for detectability. Participants will be reminded of the upcoming nail specimen collection at their 27-week and 34-week data collections, plus reminders will be included when the survey links are sent by text for these data collection timepoints. In the event of preterm birth, nail specimens will be requested immediately. The level of detectability for either nail type will be set at 8 pg/mg, which is the lower level of quantitation used for research (the standard level of detectability used for non-research testing is 20 pg/mg).

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
384 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Factorial Assignment
Intervention Model Description:
The design is a 3 (no brief intervention; one session; or one session plus two boosters) X 2 (SMS present or not present) factorial trial. Conditions are: General information (no intervention) General information + SMS Baseline brief intervention Baseline brief intervention + SMS Baseline brief intervention + 2 booster sessions Baseline brief intervention + 2 booster sessions + SMSThe design is a 3 (no brief intervention; one session; or one session plus two boosters) X 2 (SMS present or not present) factorial trial.Conditions are:General information (no intervention) General information + SMS Baseline brief intervention Baseline brief intervention + SMS Baseline brief intervention + 2 booster sessions Baseline brief intervention + 2 booster sessions + SMS
Masking:
Single (Outcomes Assessor)
Masking Description:
Participants will be randomly assigned to a study condition during the baseline assessment by the study software and the assigned condition content will be provided directly to the participant rather than by study staff. The staff member who enrolls the participant will not have access to the assigned condition/content, which will aid in blinding study staff. The biostatistician and data analyst will be blinded for all hypothesis-testing analyses by coding experimental condition with a non-identifying number, the table for which will be maintained at the PI's office.
Primary Purpose:
Prevention
Official Title:
Scaling Up: A Multi-Site Trial of e-SBI for Alcohol Use in Pregnancy
Anticipated Study Start Date :
Aug 15, 2022
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Oct 31, 2024
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Oct 31, 2024

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Placebo Comparator: General information

Control

Other: General information
General information related to pregnancy is provided electronically.

Experimental: General information + SMS

SMS refers to tailored text messaging.

Other: General information
General information related to pregnancy is provided electronically.

Behavioral: SMS
Tailored text messages (SMS) will be sent to participants twice a week from baseline throughout her pregnancy (or until she opts out). The messages will be tailored on her quit status, goals, efficacy, level of concern, gestation, and perceived advantages of change. Messages will follow current state of the art regarding messaging preferences, tailoring, and gain-framing. The current list includes messages regarding fetal development, nutrition, exercise, and stress management, as well as alcohol.

Experimental: Baseline brief intervention

Brief technology-delivered intervention for alcohol use during pregnancy

Behavioral: Baseline brief intervention
Interactive brief motivational intervention is delivered electronically. Provides an introduction, describing the purpose and duration, emphasizing the non-judgmental nature of the brief intervention (BI). Uses a high-quality video featuring gain-framed messaging, quit recommendation, and testimonial from a race-matched woman; tailored on race-ethnicity, efficacy, binge frequency, and level of concern regarding her own alcohol use. The e-BI poses a question regarding the participant's willingness to avoid alcohol throughout her pregnancy. Responses to this question will sort participants into one of three major branches, each using motivational principles to promote alcohol abstinence during pregnancy.

Experimental: Baseline brief intervention + SMS

Brief technology-delivered intervention for alcohol use during pregnancy, plus tailored text messaging

Behavioral: Baseline brief intervention
Interactive brief motivational intervention is delivered electronically. Provides an introduction, describing the purpose and duration, emphasizing the non-judgmental nature of the brief intervention (BI). Uses a high-quality video featuring gain-framed messaging, quit recommendation, and testimonial from a race-matched woman; tailored on race-ethnicity, efficacy, binge frequency, and level of concern regarding her own alcohol use. The e-BI poses a question regarding the participant's willingness to avoid alcohol throughout her pregnancy. Responses to this question will sort participants into one of three major branches, each using motivational principles to promote alcohol abstinence during pregnancy.

Behavioral: SMS
Tailored text messages (SMS) will be sent to participants twice a week from baseline throughout her pregnancy (or until she opts out). The messages will be tailored on her quit status, goals, efficacy, level of concern, gestation, and perceived advantages of change. Messages will follow current state of the art regarding messaging preferences, tailoring, and gain-framing. The current list includes messages regarding fetal development, nutrition, exercise, and stress management, as well as alcohol.

Experimental: Baseline brief intervention + 2 booster sessions

Brief technology-delivered intervention for alcohol use during pregnancy, plus two very brief (<5 minutes) online boosters using the participants' own mobile device.

Behavioral: Baseline brief intervention
Interactive brief motivational intervention is delivered electronically. Provides an introduction, describing the purpose and duration, emphasizing the non-judgmental nature of the brief intervention (BI). Uses a high-quality video featuring gain-framed messaging, quit recommendation, and testimonial from a race-matched woman; tailored on race-ethnicity, efficacy, binge frequency, and level of concern regarding her own alcohol use. The e-BI poses a question regarding the participant's willingness to avoid alcohol throughout her pregnancy. Responses to this question will sort participants into one of three major branches, each using motivational principles to promote alcohol abstinence during pregnancy.

Behavioral: Remote online booster sessions
Two < 5-minute online e-BI boosters will be sent to participants via text link (one at 6 weeks post-baseline and one at 30 weeks gestation). The boosters will include a brief summary of the prior session in terms of the participant's concerns and goals. It will also include an assessment of her current status regarding (a) use of alcohol, and (b) intentions regarding future use of alcohol. A brief (1-2 minute) video tailored on her current status and prior goal will be provided. Finally, the boosters will contain optional goal-setting regarding reaching or maintaining abstinence.

Experimental: Baseline brief intervention + 2 booster sessions + SMS

Brief technology-delivered intervention for alcohol use during pregnancy, plus two very brief (<5 minutes) online boosters using the participants' own mobile device, plus tailored SMS.

Behavioral: Baseline brief intervention
Interactive brief motivational intervention is delivered electronically. Provides an introduction, describing the purpose and duration, emphasizing the non-judgmental nature of the brief intervention (BI). Uses a high-quality video featuring gain-framed messaging, quit recommendation, and testimonial from a race-matched woman; tailored on race-ethnicity, efficacy, binge frequency, and level of concern regarding her own alcohol use. The e-BI poses a question regarding the participant's willingness to avoid alcohol throughout her pregnancy. Responses to this question will sort participants into one of three major branches, each using motivational principles to promote alcohol abstinence during pregnancy.

Behavioral: Remote online booster sessions
Two < 5-minute online e-BI boosters will be sent to participants via text link (one at 6 weeks post-baseline and one at 30 weeks gestation). The boosters will include a brief summary of the prior session in terms of the participant's concerns and goals. It will also include an assessment of her current status regarding (a) use of alcohol, and (b) intentions regarding future use of alcohol. A brief (1-2 minute) video tailored on her current status and prior goal will be provided. Finally, the boosters will contain optional goal-setting regarding reaching or maintaining abstinence.

Behavioral: SMS
Tailored text messages (SMS) will be sent to participants twice a week from baseline throughout her pregnancy (or until she opts out). The messages will be tailored on her quit status, goals, efficacy, level of concern, gestation, and perceived advantages of change. Messages will follow current state of the art regarding messaging preferences, tailoring, and gain-framing. The current list includes messages regarding fetal development, nutrition, exercise, and stress management, as well as alcohol.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Number of participants abstinent from alcohol as measured by Timeline FollowBack Calendar Recall and Ethyl Glucuronide (EtG) [90 days]

    The primary outcome of abstinence will be defined as no self-report of alcohol use in the past 90 days via Timeline FollowBack, and no evidence of use via EtG. The Timeline FollowBack will be administered at 34 weeks gestation and biospecimens for EtG are collected at approximately 37 weeks gestation (36 weeks for fingernails; 38 weeks for toenails).

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Number of participants with a healthy birth outcome (full-term live birth of normal birthweight, with no days in NICU) [Entire period of gestation]

    Healthy birth outcome, using birth outcome data from the state of birth, is defined as a full-term live birth (>=36 weeks + 6 days) of normal birthweight (>2500 gms) and with no days in neonatal intensive care.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years to 35 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study:
Female
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No
Inclusion Criteria:
  • Age 18-35 years

  • Pregnant

  • Self-report of alcohol risk (those who score positive on the T-ACE screen (Sokol, Martier, & Ager, 1989), and also report either drinking weekly or more in the past month, or having 4 or more drinks at a time at least monthly in the 12 months before becoming pregnant

  • 20 weeks or less gestation

  • Planning to give birth in either Connecticut, Massachusetts, or Michigan

  • Owning a mobile device that they are willing to use to receive study-related text reminders and to complete online study activities including assessments/boosters

  • Completion of baseline assessment (enrollment criterion)

Exclusion Criteria:
  • Not planning to carry the baby to term

  • Unable to communicate in English

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 Michigan State University Flint Michigan United States 48502

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • Michigan State University
  • National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)
  • University of Massachusetts, Worcester

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Steven J Ondersma, PhD, Michigan State University
  • Principal Investigator: Kimberly A Yonkers, MD, University of Massachusetts, Worcester

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
Steven J. Ondersma, Professor and PI, Michigan State University
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT04332172
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • 1R01AA026596-01A1
  • 1R01AA026596-01A1
First Posted:
Apr 2, 2020
Last Update Posted:
Aug 10, 2022
Last Verified:
Aug 1, 2022
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
Yes
Plan to Share IPD:
Yes
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Aug 10, 2022