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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 April 2025
Objectives/Goals: Youth with IBD have preventive, psychosocial, and acute care needs beyond those of peers, yet receipt of services does not match those needs. Our objectives are to assess the feasibility of (1) an individualized care plan intervention to improve perceived and measured care quality and (2) a pragmatic trial design embedded in pediatric IBD practice. Methods/Study Population: This is a pilot rollout-design randomized trial (n = 60) at a regional academic medical center. Eligible patients are 13–19 years old with IBD for at least 3 months and scheduled for a follow-up visit during the trial. Research staff recruits from one cluster at a time until goal enrollment (14–16). Enrollees are randomized 1:1 to intervention (MyIBD now) or control (MyIBD after the trial). MyIBD combines a tabular summary of individualized acute, chronic, and preventive care needs with nurse facilitator support for patients to use the information. Surveys at baseline, 6 and 12 months measure care quality (Patient Assessment of Chronic Illness Care scale, vaccines, health services) and patient self-management skills (Partners in Health scale). Implementation outcomes are collected via chart review. Results/Anticipated Results: To date, 44 subjects have been randomized. Among subjects, the mean age is 16 years; 73% have Crohn’s disease, 77% have commercial insurance, 75% receive anti-TNF therapy, and 14% live in a rural area. Mean baseline perceived care quality (PACIC scale) is 76.9 (sd 16.3; out of 100); mean baseline perceived self-management skill (PIH scale) is 78.1 (sd 13.4; out of 96). On objective care quality measures, 59% have completed the HPV vaccine series, 32% have received an additional pneumonia vaccine; in the past year 68% have had a screening for mood disorders, 20% an emergency department visit for IBD, and 18% an IBD hospitalization. To date, the IBD clinical team has achieved 100% completion (intervention subjects receive MyIBD plus nurse facilitation) and 0% contamination (control subjects inappropriately receive MyIBD). Discussion/Significance of Impact: Study results to date support the feasibility of the pragmatic, embedded trial design and indicate opportunities for improvement in care quality as perceived by patients and as measured by common preventive and acute care quality indicators. An individualized care plan supported with nurse facilitation may improve pediatric IBD care quality.