RECEIVER: Digital Service Model for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
-
- STATUS
- Recruiting
-
- participants needed
- 400
-
- sponsor
- NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde
Summary
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a serious but treatable chronic health condition. Optimised management improves symptoms, complications, quality of life and survival. Disease exacerbations, which have adverse outcomes and often trigger hospital admissions, underpin the rising costs of managing COPD (projected increase in the United Kingdom (UK) to 2.3bn by 2030). The costs and care-quality gap of COPD exacerbations, coupled with the global rising prevalence present a major healthcare challenge. This study proposal, which has been developed in partnership with patients, clinicians, enterprise and government representation is to conduct an implementation and effectiveness observational cohort study to establish a continuous and preventative digital health service model for COPD.
The implementation proposals comprise: -
- Establishing a digital resource for high-risk COPD patients which contains symptom diaries (structured patient reported outcome questionnaires), integrates physiology monitoring (FitBit and home NIV therapy data), enables asynchronous communication with clinical team, supports COPD self-management and tracks interaction with the service (for endpoint analyses).
- Establishing a cloud-based clinical COPD dashboard which will integrate background electronic health record data, core COPD clinical dataset, patient-reported outcomes, physiology and therapy data and patient messaging to provide clinical decision support and practice-efficiencies, enhancing delivery of guideline-based COPD care.
- Use the acquired dataset to explore feasibility and accuracy of machine-learned predictive modelling risk scores, via cloud-based infrastructure, which will be for future prospective clinical trial.
Our primary endpoint for the effectiveness evaluation is number of patients screened and recruited who successfully engage with this RECEIVER clinical service. The implementation components of the project will be iterated during the study, based on patient and clinical user experience and engagement. Secondary endpoints include a number of specified clinical outcomes, clinical service outcomes, machine-learning supported exploratory analyses, patient-centred outcomes and healthcare cost analyses.
Description
Patients will be screened from emergency attendance or admission at South and North Sector (Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, and Glasgow Royal Infirmary) and from referrals to the COPD clinical team at these sites.
Patients meeting inclusion criteria will be approached and offered enrolment to the study. Recruitment and consent timings will be individualised to be most efficient and least burdensome for patients. For some patients it will be appropriate to do this immediately to avoid burden of repeated attendances for some patients, delay and consideration may be appropriate for some patients the enrolment and engagement may be a staged process (consent at time of hospital attendance, study commence at follow up home or clinic visit etc).
Patients recruited will receive support information and assistance with login setups for the digital service components. Literature with frequently asked questions (FAQs), and team contacts for service support are available for throughout the study.
Patients enrolled will be asked, and prompted with text notifications, to complete daily short structured COPD symptom questionnaire. There are a small number of additional questions on a weekly basis, with quality of life questions completed once every 28 days. Patients recruited will have a "Fitbit" wristband wearable to monitor physiology. They will receive text message prompts to charge (weekly) and sync (daily) this device.
Patients with hypercapnic respiratory failure will additionally be on home non-invasive ventilation (NIV) treatment - this is part of their routine clinical care rather than a study intervention. However, the study patient resource and messaging system will be used to gather information and support this treatment.
Selected patients, who are recruited during hospital admission or attendance and will be attending outpatient clinic follow up, will undergo exploratory physiology measurements - parasternal electromyography (EMG) (similar to electrocardiography (ECG) recording, takes ~20 minutes with breathing manoeuvres), oscillometry (a breathing test involving 10 resting non-effortful breaths blown into the medical device), home pollution monitoring (a pack which rests in patients bedroom +/- tube placed outside house) for 7 days - alongside routine clinical care at baseline and 3 monthly intervals.
Patients will have linked access from the patient resource to curated information (MyLungsMyLife website) about COPD diagnosis, and all aspects of management. Specific prompts about management - e.g. timing to make appointment for annual flu vaccination - will be provided through platform-text notifications. Self-management content of the resource will potentially be further developed over iterations within the study any change in content of patient materials would be advised as a protocol amendment.
Patients will be able to message the clinical team using the patient portal. This supplements existing availability of answer phone contact details provided as part of routine clinical care. Automatic messages will notify patients that this is not for emergency contact, and that replies should be expected within Mon-Fri working hours, by next working day. This messaging system will be used to support self management, home oxygen and home NIV treatment initiation and monitoring, and practical aspects such as appointment scheduling and equipment consumable replenishment.
The clinical team will be able to access the data from the patients symptom diaries, wearable and NIV physiology directly - asynchronously, rather than delayed acquisition of this data at a clinical contact. This data visualisation will support routine clinical care, and better inform unscheduled advice contacts from patients (e.g. help determine significance of apparent worsening symptoms).
This data will be subject to machine-learning analysis, which will evaluate secondary endpoints, as per protocol.
Details
Condition | Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease, Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease |
---|---|
Age | 18years - 100years |
Treatment | COPD digital services |
Clinical Study Identifier | NCT04240353 |
Sponsor | NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde |
Last Modified on | 16 February 2024 |
How to participate?
Additional screening procedures may be conducted by the study team before you can be confirmed eligible to participate.
Learn moreIf you are confirmed eligible after full screening, you will be required to understand and sign the informed consent if you decide to enroll in the study. Once enrolled you may be asked to make scheduled visits over a period of time.
Learn moreComplete your scheduled study participation activities and then you are done. You may receive summary of study results if provided by the sponsor.
Learn moreSimilar trials to consider
Browse trials for
Not finding what you're looking for?
Sign up as a volunteer to stay informed
Every year hundreds of thousands of volunteers step forward to participate in research. Sign up as a volunteer and receive email notifications when clinical trials are posted in the medical category of interest to you.
Sign up as volunteerStudy Definition
WikipediaAdd a private note
- Select a piece of text.
- Add notes visible only to you.
- Send it to people through a passcode protected link.