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Mobile Cued Adherence Therapy (mCAT) for Blood Pressure Medication

Mobile Cued Adherence Therapy (mCAT): A Scalable Habit Formation Intervention to Improve Blood Pressure Medication Adherence Based on a Widely Used Smartphone App

Status
Recruiting
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT06876233
Acronym
mCAT
Enrollment
600
Registered
2025-03-14
Start date
2025-09-01
Completion date
2029-03-30
Last updated
2026-03-16

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Medication Adherence, Hypertension, Habits

Keywords

habits, medication adherence, hypertension, blood pressure, mobile app

Brief summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to determine the effectiveness of a novel mobile health-based habit formation intervention for increasing and maintaining adherence to anti-hypertensive (AH) medication among people living with hypertension and indicate medication nonadherence. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Can daily incentives for AH pill taking increase and maintain AH medication adherence, control blood pressure, and reduce healthcare utilization and costs? * Can daily incentives for AH pill taking, combined with action planning (e.g., "After I drink my morning coffee, I will take my medication.") increase and maintain medication adherence, control blood pressure, and reduce healthcare utilization and costs? * What aspects of daily incentives and/or action planning do participants find most helpful or effective for AH medication adherence? * What barriers exist for participants who receive daily incentives and/or action planning? Researchers will compare three study groups: those who only receive daily incentives for the AH pill taking, those who receive daily incentives for AH pill taking combined with action planning, and a control group (who do not receive daily incentives for AH pill taking or action planning). By comparing these three groups, the researchers will be able to determine the effectiveness of the daily incentives with or without action planning for promoting long-term AH medication adherence, reduce healthcare costs, and improve blood pressure. Participants will: * Complete 5 online surveys over the course of 2 years (baseline, month 4, month 8, month 12, month 24). * Submit blood pressure reading for 7 consecutive days after each survey timepoint. * Submit photo evidence of their AH pill taking for 4 months (intervention groups only). The highest- and lowest-performing participants in each intervention group will also be invited to complete a 30-minute interview to identify additional factors that contributed to either successful or unsuccessful completion of the intervention.

Interventions

BEHAVIORALWellth App

Participants will be eligible to receive $30 at the end of four consecutive 30-day periods ($120 in total) if they demonstrate complete medication adherence through the Wellth app (i.e. taking a daily picture of their pills in their hand and submitting it through the Wellth app). Photos must be submitted within a 2-hour window around a specific time of day chosen by the participant and set at the start of each 30-day period. They will lose $2 (from their $30 total) for every day they miss a medication check-in within their pre-set 2-hour window with the Wellth app. The Wellth app will also provide reminders at the end of the day if participants have not yet completed their daily check-in.

BEHAVIORALAction Planning

Participants will learn about habits and the importance of contextual cues for triggering their AH pill taking, and be asked to complete an electronic worksheet with a detailed description of their personalized contextual cue in terms of its: 1) location (e.g., where in the participant's house or office does this cue occur); 2) time of day; 3) preceding action (e.g., "I usually go to the bathroom before making coffee"); and 4) a visual cue (e.g., "my coffee cup will trigger pill taking").

BEHAVIORALWellth + Cue

Participants will be eligible to receive $30 at the end of four consecutive 30-day periods ($120 in total) if they submit daily evidence of their medication adherence habit using the Wellth app (i.e. one photo that provides evidence of pill-taking and one photo that provides evidence of their contextual cue, which participants will select and specify on their comprehension survey at the start of the study). Photos must be submitted within a 2-hour window around a specific time of day chosen by the participant and set at the start of each 30-day period. They will lose $2 (from their $30 total) for every day they miss a medication check-in (plus evidence of their contextual cue) within their pre-set 2-hour window with the Wellth app. The Wellth app will also provide reminders at the end of the day if participants have not yet completed their daily check-in.

Sponsors

Chad Stecher@asu.edu
Lead SponsorOTHER
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
CollaboratorNIH
Wellth Inc.
CollaboratorINDUSTRY
Arizona State University
CollaboratorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

Eligibility Criteria: * Aged 18 years or older * Currently diagnosed with hypertension (either stage I or stage II hypertension) * Able to read/write/understand English * Have daily access to a smartphone * Engaged in hypertension care: Already been prescribed hypertension medication for a minimum of 6 months at the time of study enrollment * Demonstrated AH medication nonadherence by having over 73 days without documented AH medication prescription coverage (observable in Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) prescription drugs claims) in the past 12 months (i.e. \<80% mean adherence)

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Medication Adherence24 months prior to the study through the 24-month study periodThe investigators will use Medicaid's prescription data to construct the Primary Outcome of AH medication adherence using the date and supply of pills for each new prescription or refill to determine the number of days in a month a client had pills available. Since refills are often made before an existing prescription ends, the supply of new medications will be counted on days following the last available dose of the prior prescription. The number of days with available AH medication(s) will be divided by the total number of days in the same month to calculate the proportion of days covered (PDC), which will range from 0 and 1.
Cardiovascular HealthBaseline, after the 4-month intervention, 8-month follow-up, 12-month follow-up, and 24-month follow-upAll participants will be asked to submit blood pressure readings for seven consecutive days after baseline activities, and be reminded via SMS and email to submit readings after the 4-month intervention and again after the month 8, 12, and 24 assessments. The investigators will calculate the Primary Outcome measure of blood pressure as participants' mean and coefficient of variation in systolic and diastolic blood pressure over the seven-day interval.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Healthcare Utilization and Costs24 months prior to the study through the 24-month study periodThe investigators will use Medicaid's encounters and reimbursement costs data to construct our Secondary Outcomes of healthcare utilization and costs. The investigators will generate separate monthly measures of the number of unique encounters, as well as the number of days in an emergency department, and inpatient and outpatient healthcare settings. Since a single encounter can be billed multiple times (thus appearing multiple times in the data) or last multiple days, the investigators will remove duplicate encounter claims based on the date of service, diagnostic codes, and procedure costs associated with each encounter. The investigators will separately measure the monthly AHCCCS reimbursement costs for all unique encounters in each healthcare setting.

Countries

United States

Contacts

CONTACTChad D Stecher, PhD
chad.stecher@asu.edu602-496-0957

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 17, 2026