January 26, 2022: PCT Grand Rounds to Highlight Primary Results of EMBED Trial

Headshots of Dr. Edward Melnick and Dr. Gail D'Onofrio
Dr. Edward Melnick and Dr. Gail D’Onofrio, co–principal investigators of EMBED

In this Friday’s PCT Grand Rounds, the principal investigators of EMBED, an NIH Collaboratory Trial, will announce the study’s primary results.

Co–principal investigators Dr. Edward Melnick and Dr. Gail D’Onofrio of Yale University will present “EMBED Trial Results: Pragmatic Trial of User-Centered Clinical Decision Support to Implement Emergency Department-Initiated Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder.” The Grand Rounds session will be held on Friday, January 28, at 1:00 pm eastern.

EMBED is a pragmatic trial to evaluate the effect of user-centered computerized clinical decision support on rates of emergency department–initiated buprenorphine and referral for ongoing medication-assisted treatment for patients with opioid use disorder.

Join the online meeting.

EMBED is supported within the NIH Collaboratory by the NIH Common Fund and by a cooperative agreement from the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

December 14, 2021: A Year of New Insights From the NIH Collaboratory

Collage of journal coversNIH Collaboratory researchers in 2021 shared study results, generated new knowledge, and developed innovative research methods in pragmatic clinical trials. Their work included insights from the Coordinating Center and Core Working Groups, analyses from the NIH Collaboratory Distributed Research Network, and results and methodological approaches from the NIH Collaboratory Trials.

So far this year, the NIH Collaboratory has produced 3 dozen articles in the peer-reviewed literature, including the primary results of the PPACT and TSOS trials, the study design of the Nudge and OPTIMUM studies, insights into the COVID-19 pandemic from the EMBED and ACP PEACE studies, and more:

NIH Collaboratory Coordinating Center

NIH Collaboratory Distributed Research Network

ACP PEACE NIH Collaboratory Trial

BackInAction NIH Collaboratory Trial

EMBED NIH Collaboratory Trial

GRACE NIH Collaboratory Trial

HiLo NIH Collaboratory Trial

LIRE NIH Collaboratory Trial

Nudge NIH Collaboratory Trial

OPTIMUM NIH Collaboratory Trial

PPACT NIH Collaboratory Trial

PRIM-ER NIH Collaboratory Trial

PROVEN NIH Collaboratory Trial

SPOT NIH Collaboratory Trial

TSOS NIH Collaboratory Trials

March 23, 2021: EMBED Team Reports Widespread Worsening of the Opioid Epidemic in 2020

In an analysis of data collected as part of EMBED, an NIH Collaboratory Demonstration Project, the rate of opioid overdose visits per 100 all-cause visits to emergency departments rose nearly 30% in 2020. The absolute number of opioid overdose visits increased by more than 10%, even while visits for other life-threatening conditions declined. The findings provide insight into the widespread worsening of the opioid epidemic during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.

The paper was published ahead of print this month in the Annals of Emergency Medicine.

The study accessed data from 25 emergency departments in Alabama, Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts, North Carolina, and Rhode Island. Five of the 6 healthcare systems in the study are participating in EMBED, a pragmatic trial of prescribing practices for opioid use disorder in emergency departments. An amended study protocol enabled the researchers to collect the data as part of an effort to better understand the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on trial enrollment.

EMBED is supported within the NIH Collaboratory by a cooperative agreement from the National Institute on Drug Abuse and receives logistical and technical support from the NIH Collaboratory Coordinating Center. Read more about EMBED in the Living Textbook, and learn more about the NIH Collaboratory Demonstration Projects.

For more news and resources related to the COVID-19 public health emergency, see our COVID-19 Resources page.

December 15, 2020: A Year of Results and New Insights From the NIH Collaboratory

Collection of Journal CoversNIH Collaboratory researchers in 2020 reported study results, generated new knowledge, and developed innovative research methods in pragmatic clinical trials. Their work included insights from the Coordinating Center and Core Working Groups, analyses from the NIH Collaboratory Distributed Research Network, and results and methodological approaches from the NIH Collaboratory Trials.

So far this year, the NIH Collaboratory has produced more than 3 dozen articles in the peer-reviewed literature, including the primary results of the PROVEN and LIRE trials, the study design of ACP PEACE, insights into the COVID-19 pandemic from TSOS and EMBED, and more:

NIH Collaboratory Coordinating Center

NIH Collaboratory Distributed Research Network

ACP PEACE NIH Collaboratory Trial

EMBED NIH Collaboratory Trial

HiLo NIH Collaboratory Trial

LIRE NIH Collaboratory Trial

PPACT NIH Collaboratory Trial

PRIM-ER NIH Collaboratory Trial

PROVEN NIH Collaboratory Trial

SPOT NIH Collaboratory Trial

STOP CRC NIH Collaboratory Trial

TSOS NIH Collaboratory Trial

August 3, 2020: Study Using EMBED Data Finds Drop in Emergency Department Visits During COVID-19 Pandemic

An analysis of data collected as part of EMBED, an NIH Collaboratory Trial, found significant decreases in emergency department visits in 5 large healthcare systems in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.

The study was published online today in JAMA Internal Medicine.

In 24 emergency departments in Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, and North Carolina, the number of visits declined by 42% to 64%, doing so most rapidly as the public health emergency intensified in March. The study also found that hospital admissions from emergency departments began to increase as COVID-19 case rates increased at the local level.

Data from 4 of the 5 healthcare systems in the study were collected as part of EMBED, a pragmatic trial of prescribing practices for opioid use disorder in emergency departments. An amended study protocol enabled the researchers to collect the data as part of an effort to better understand the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on trial enrollment.

Although the study could not identify the reasons for the trends, the researchers recommended that public health officials “emphasize the importance of continuing to visit the [emergency department] for serious symptoms, illnesses, and injuries that cannot be managed in other settings” and “provide guidance and resources to help patients determine the best place to receive care as the available health care capacity changes during the pandemic.”

EMBED is supported within the NIH Collaboratory by a cooperative agreement from the National Institute on Drug Abuse and receives logistical and technical support from the NIH Collaboratory Coordinating Center. Read more about EMBED in the Living Textbook, and learn more about the NIH Collaboratory Trials.

For more news and resources related to the COVID-19 public health emergency, see our COVID-19 Resources page.

June 1, 2020: New Chapter in the Living Textbook Shares Best Practices for Clinical Decision Support in Pragmatic Trials

A new chapter in the Living Textbook describes special considerations and best practices for designing and evaluating clinical decision support (CDS) for use in embedded pragmatic clinical trials (ePCTs). CDS functionality can support recruitment, enable the delivery of a new intervention, or be the intervention under evaluation.

The main topics of the chapter are:

The chapter also includes several case examples of CDS used to support the NIH Collaboratory Trials.

December 18, 2019: NIH Collaboratory Shares New Findings and Fresh Insights in 2019

NIH Collaboratory researchers in 2019 continued to generate new knowledge and research methods in pragmatic clinical trials. Their work included insights from the Coordinating Center and Core Working Groups, large-scale analyses of data from the NIH Collaboratory Distributed Research Network, and results and innovative methodological approaches from the NIH Collaboratory Trials.

So far this year, the NIH Collaboratory has produced nearly 3 dozen articles in the peer-reviewed literature, including the primary results of the ABATE Infection trial, confirmation by the TiME trial of the feasibility of embedding large pragmatic trials in clinical care, and more:

NIH Collaboratory Coordinating Center

NIH Collaboratory Distributed Research Network

ABATE Infection NIH Collaboratory Trial

EMBED NIH Collaboratory Trial

PPACT NIH Collaboratory Trial

PRIM-ER NIH Collaboratory Trial

PROVEN NIH Collaboratory Trial

SPOT NIH Collaboratory Trial

STOP CRC NIH Collaboratory Trial

TiME NIH Collaboratory Trial

TSOS NIH Collaboratory Trial

June 20, 2019: EMBED Investigators Discuss Progress and Transition to Implementation Phase

At the May 2019 meeting of the NIH Collaboratory Steering Committee, we talked with Drs. Ted Melnick and Gail D’Onofrio of EMBED, an NIH Collaboratory Trial, to hear about progress and challenges during the UG3 planning phase. The goal of EMBED is to test whether implementation of a user-centered clinical decision support system increases adoption of initiation of buprenorphine/naloxone into the routine emergency care of patients with opioid use disorder. In the UG3 phase, the study team put in place the infrastructure of a pragmatic, multicenter, parallel, group-randomized health IT intervention. EMBED recently transitioned to the UH3 implementation phase and plans to launch the intervention at 20 sites across 5 healthcare systems in August 2019.

“With EMBED, we’re trying to take evidence-based research and implement it to improve practice. EMBED is both a research and patient care project.”

Were there any surprises during the study’s planning phase?

The first surprise came at last year’s Steering Committee meeting, when we met with the Biostatistics and Study Design Core. They encouraged us to change our original study design from stepped-wedge to group-randomized, which we did. We think this advice led to a stronger study. The main reason for this is the group-randomized design’s ability to better account for temporal changes. Since our intervention is being conducted in the middle of an opioid crisis, there are potentially other concurrent interventions that could make it difficult to determine the effect of our intervention. The group-randomized design should give us better insight into whether our intervention is driving behavior change in treating patients with opioid use disorder.

What is an example of a challenge that you were able to overcome with the help of a Core Working Group?

In addition to design advice from the Biostatistics Core, we received expert guidance from the Ethics and Regulatory Core, who helped us prepare for the central IRB process. The Core’s input was essential to how we developed our protocol’s waiver of informed consent, data handling, and protection of patient privacy. We were able to demonstrate to the IRB that our approach was logical and informed. We think this helped the IRB “get it” and allowed us to more efficiently address patient privacy issues in a vulnerable population across multiple healthcare systems.

What other key challenges have you faced?

One challenge was on the IT side with electronic health record (EHR) integration, which required more customization than we initially planned. How we work with EHR vendors is evolving, and we’ve found good partners so that we can integrate across different systems. This has strengthened our intervention so that it is perceived as more universal than one designed only for a specific EHR system.

Another challenge is the general under-resourcing of healthcare delivery systems for pragmatic research. We found that, regardless of budget, getting approval from system leadership for an IT change is often not enough—what is needed is figuring out who is going to make the change, how much time is involved, and whether the team has the bandwidth to complete the task. You cannot underestimate the degree of difficulty a change poses to a health system that is still struggling to get the clinical side of things right.

The way a study is framed to leadership is important—understand what’s motivating them to participate and move a project forward. With EMBED, we’re trying to take evidence-based research and implement it to improve practice. EMBED is both a research and patient care project. We need to impress upon leadership that we can improve patient outcomes and we’ll pay for it, but we need their help and support in navigating the process through the institution.

What words of advice do you have for investigators conducting their first embedded PCT?

  • Study teams should think about potential barriers from the beginning and find solutions quickly.
  • Make sure that health system leadership discusses your project with those on the ground.
  • Enlist the experts your study needs for each site. In our case, we needed both an IT expert for the operational side and a clinical expert, or we couldn’t have moved the project forward.
  • Recognize that there are trade-offs in pragmatic design and remember that you’re working with health systems in which your intervention will need to be replicated.
  • Make your intervention sustainable and easily usable by the clinician, without the need for research or other additional staff.

EMBED is supported within the NIH Collaboratory by a cooperative agreement from the National Institute on Drug Abuse and receives logistical and technical support from the NIH Collaboratory Coordinating Center. Read more about EMBED in the Living Textbook, and learn more about the NIH Collaboratory Trials.

April 9, 2019: EMBED Awarded Continuation From Planning to Implementation Phase

The investigators of EMBED, an NIH Collaboratory Trial, have received approval to move from the planning phase to the implementation phase of their study. Congratulations to Dr. Ted Melnick, Dr. Gail D’Onofrio, and the EMBED study team for their excellent work!

“The opioid crisis is taking a devastating toll on Americans, their families, and their communities. The EMBED project leverages the urgency of our nation’s opioid crisis to bring together leaders in human-centered design, clinical informatics, data coordination, emergency medicine, and addiction medicine to provide an integrated, user-friendly solution to emergency clinicians caring for people with opioid addiction.”   —Dr. Edward Melnick, Co-PI of EMBED

EMBED (Pragmatic Trial of User-Centered Clinical Decision Support to Implement Emergency Department-Initiated Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder) is designed to evaluate the effect of computerized clinical decision support on rates of emergency department-initiated buprenorphine/naloxone (BUP), which is a well-established outpatient treatment for people with opioid use disorder. BUP can only be prescribed by appropriately trained physicians. Although patients with opioid use disorder often seek medical care in emergency departments, the practice of initiating BUP in the emergency department is not common.

“Initiating buprenorphine in the emergency department has the potential to improve and save so many lives, but currently adoption rates are close to 0%. We believe that the EMBED intervention will be a crucial part of getting this evidence-based practice into routine emergency care.”   —Dr. Edward Melnick, Co-PI of EMBED

NIH Collaboratory Trials begin with a 1-year, milestone-driven planning phase. Projects become eligible to move to the implementation phase after an administrative review of progress toward scientific milestones and feasibility requirements.

In the planning phase, the EMBED study team developed the clinician decision support tools intended to facilitate the management of people with untreated opioid use disorder who seek care in emergency departments. In the next phase, the team will implement the trial and test the effect of the clinical decision support tool compared to usual care on outcomes in patients with opioid use disorder who seek care in emergency departments.

EMBED was supported within the NIH Collaboratory by a cooperative agreement from the National Institute on Drug Abuse. The study also received logistical and technical support from the NIH Collaboratory Coordinating Center through a cooperative agreement from the Office of Strategic Coordination within the Office of the NIH Director.

 

May 2018 Steering Committee and Onboarding Meeting: Nudge, PRIM-ER, P4TH, EMBED, ACP PEACE, and HiLo

Steering Committee Meeting

May 14-16, 2018
Bethesda, MD

Main Purpose

Day 1: Welcome the new UG3 NIH Collaboratory Trials; provide introductions, an overview of the Collaboratory, and an understanding of the Core Working Groups; and discuss lessons learned, data sharing, and current ethics and regulatory issues.

Day 2: Celebrate the Collaboratory's progress; kick off the next 5 years; receive updates from the Core Working Groups; and hear about the top barriers/challenges and lessons learned from the UH3s.

Day 3: Intensive workshop to start discussions on embedded A vs. B pragmatic clinical trials.

Monday, May 14, 2018

Welcome, Opening Remarks, and Introductions
David Shurtleff, PhD; Richard Hodes, MD; Lesley Curtis, PhD

Overview of a Cooperative Agreement
Wendy Weber, ND, PhD, MPH

Overview of the NIH HCS Research Collaboratory Program
David Shurtleff, PhD

Panel of Directors: Richard Hodes, MD; Wilson Compton, MD; David Murray, PhD; Bill Riley, PhD; Gary Gibbons, MD; Rob Star, MD

Collaboratory Coordinating Center Overview and Goals
Adrian Hernandez, MD, MHS

Rethinking Clinical Trials: A Living Textbook of Pragmatic Clinical Trials
Jonathan McCall, MS

Policies and Guidance Documents

NIH Collaboratory Data Sharing Policy and Considerations
Adrian Hernandez, MD, MHS

Publications and Products Process
Eric Larson, MD, MPH

Data Quality
Rachel Richesson, PhD, MPH

New UG3 NIH Collaboratory Trials Updates
Brief overview of the projects

NIH and Other Requirements for ClinicalTrials.gov Reporting
Deborah Zarin, MD

Results Reporting of ePCTs
Adrian Hernandez, MD, MHS

Distributed Research Network Query Capabilities
Richard Platt, MD; Lesley Curtis, PhD

Closing Remarks
David Shurtleff, PhD; Richard Hodes, MD; Lesley Curtis, PhD 

Tuesday, May 15, 2018

Welcome and Opening Remarks
David Shurtleff, PhD; Richard Hodes, MD; Lesley Curtis, PhD

Landscape of National ePCT Initiatives
Explanation of initiatives that are promoting ePCTs and future directions

Health Systems Engagement Issues and Lessons Learned from the Health Care Systems Interactions Core
Eric Larson, MD, MPH

UH3 NIH Collaboratory Trials
Top barriers/challenges and recent generalizable lessons learned

 

Tuesday, May 15, 2018 (Continued)

Discussion From New UG3 NIH Collaboratory Trials
Overview of project and discussion

CMS Quality Measures
Reena Duseja, MD

Lessons Learned From Core Groups
Discussion on generalizable knowledge created out of the Cores, how it can be used, and future work of the Cores

Data Sharing Principles and Lessons Learned
Greg Simon, MD, MPH

Closing Remarks
David Shurtleff, PhD; Richard Hodes, MD; Lesley Curtis, PhD

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Welcome and Introduction
David Shurtleff, PhD; Richard Hodes, MD; Catherine Meyers, MD; Wendy Weber, PhD, MPH

Panel Discussions

Panel 1: Partnering With Stakeholders to Conduct Embedded A vs. B Trials: Keys to Success Moderator: Rich Platt, MD, MSc

  • Steve Friedhoff, MD
  • Kenneth Sands, MD, MPH
  • Joseph Chin, MD

Panel 2: Examples in Action: Embedded A vs. B Trials Moderator: Beverly Green, MD, MPH

  • Ryan Ferguson, ScD, MPH
  • Susan Huang, MD, MPH
  • Michael Kappelman, MD, MPH

Panel 3: Maximizing the Pragmatic: Understanding Approaches to Design of Embedded A vs. B Trials Moderator: Greg Simon, MD, MPH

  • Scott Solomon, MD
  • Rachael Fleurence, PhD
  • Kourtney Davis, PhD, MSPH

Panel 4: Regulatory Aspects of Clinical Research and the Regulation of Products for Embedded A vs. B Pragmatic Trials Moderator: Adrian Hernandez 

  • Jacqueline Corrigan-Curay, MD, JD
  • Owen Faris, PhD
  • Julie Kaneshiro, MA

Panel 5: Ethical and IRB Approaches for a Successful Embedded A vs. B Pragmatic Trials Moderator: David Wendler, PhD

  • Barbara Bierer, MD
  • Spencer Hey, PhD
  • Judith Carrithers, JD, MPA

Summary Expert Panel Discussion Moderator: Cathy Meyers, MD

  • Adrian Hernandez, MD
  • Rich Platt, MD, MSc
  • Beverly Green, MD, MPH
  • Greg Simon, MD, MPH
  • Dave Wendler, PhD

Concluding Remarks 
Adrian Hernandez, MD, MHS; Rich Platt, MD, MSc