Asthma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Managing Asthma With Tele-health Technology: A Feasibility Study
Objectives:
The disease being studied is asthma. The main objective of this study is to assess the
feasibility of the recruitment goals and also the logistical issues related to use of
tele-health technology in developing electronic asthma action plan (eAAP) and communicate
with asthma patients in a time period of 24 months. The goals are: 1) enable asthma patients
to self-manage their asthma symptoms. The secondary, 2) help care providers to intervene
appropriately based on the patient's health status. The secondary objective is to explore the
cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness of the proposed technology. Our research group proposes
to complete a feasibility study, with an interim analysis for a formal power calculation and
then acquire ethics to report these results and study design with anticipated publication
prior to proceeding with a full randomized controlled trial to assess the efficacy of this
intervention. The outcome measure will be assessed and data will be presented in a 24-month
time frame.
Aims and goals:
The main aim of our proposed study is to assist asthma patients to practice asthma
self-management at home that will eventually enable them to control their asthma, and
specifically, prevent asthma exacerbation. Therefore, the ultimate goal of our proposed study
is to improve patient health outcome via enhancing patient-physician interaction and using a
more practical asthma action plan model (eAAP) that could be followed easily by the patient
and their doctor.
Our hypothesis is that asthma patients who have access to the electronic online action plan
complimented by weekly text messages to reinforce adherence will have a reduced rate of
asthma exacerbation. We further hypothesize that these subjects will have an improvement in
secondary measures including quality of life, better asthma control and patient satisfaction.
We also anticipate that such an approach in asthma management will be cost-effective as
outlined below.
In our study design we propose to use a web-based application and inform asthma patients
through weekly Text Message (SMS) reminders to take their controller medication regularly and
also a message to visit the web-based e-AAP and assess the current level of asthma control.
This will be a two-way interaction and personalized feedback protocol to monitor patients at
home and during daily activities. We will use an adequate sample size to provide an interim
analysis of efficacy and the subsequent total number of subjects that will need to be
enrolled. Each patient (in the relevant group, as explained below) will have his/her own
profile, which will enable us to send and receive personalized (exchange) information using a
web application process via cell phones. This approach will allow interaction between patient
and asthma care counselor/ provider aiming to improve asthma control.
This study will test the hypothesis that using mobile phone reminder messages and web-based
monitoring, as part of a structured care plan, will improve clinical outcomes; namely
reduction in the rate of exacerbation, in patients with asthma. We also aim to explore the
cost-effectiveness of this technology. Our research group proposes to complete a feasibility
study, with an interim analysis for a formal power calculation and then acquire ethics to
report these results and study design with anticipated publication prior to proceeding with a
full randomized controlled trial to assess the efficacy of this intervention. We predict that
using a combination of Internet and SMS messaging technology will empower patients to manage
their asthma and eventually prevent asthma exacerbation based on their personalized action
plan as well as a SMS application. We plan to compare the web-based/SMS reminder method with
written action plan approach in a 24-month time frame, as explained later in this proposal.
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