Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The novel coronavirus (COVID-19) emerged in December 2019, and in mere months has spread to more than 104 countries, resulting in an outbreak of viral pneumonia worldwide.

Current local quarantine policy in Hong Kong for individuals suspected for COVID-19 requires daily self-reported symptomatology and body temperature, given the intermittent nature and the high dependency of self-discipline undermine the practicality of the approach. To date, the advance in sensor technology has made possible to continuously monitor individual physiological parameters using a simple wearable device. Together with the mobile wearable technology that allowing instantaneous, multi-directional, and massive data transfer, remote continuous physiological monitoring is made possible. The Cardiology division, the Univeristy of Hong Kong has been in collaboration with Biofourmis to implement such technology for remote heart failure management. Similar digital therapeutic system can be applied to remotely monitor physiological parameters of large number of quarantined or suspected COVID-19 at home or in quarantine facility. It is purposed to allow the monitoring team to effectively and remotely monitor COVID-19 quarantined and patients, manage and evaluate the disease progression.


Clinical Trial Description

Owing to the massive outbreak of COVID-19, as of March 9, 2020, the virus has reportedly caused 108,618 infections and 3,800 deaths globally. The World Health Organization (WHO) has declared COVID-19 disease a public health emergency of international concern. As there has yet been specific therapeutic or vaccine for the condition, rigorous implementation of traditional public health measures including isolation, quarantine, social distancing, and community containment is the principle strategy to control the COVID-19 epidemic. In addition to the isolation of confirmed COVID-19 infected patients from noninfected population, it is equally if not more important to quarantine asymptomatic individuals with possible exposure to COVID-19 in order to reduce the viral spread. Indeed, quarantine measures have been initiated in many countries and regions, which restrict movements of asymptomatic individuals with COVID-19 exposure often with fever and symptom surveillance at home or designated facilities for the presumed incubation period (14 days). While conceptually attractive, the intermittency and high dependency of selfdiscipline for body temperature and symptom surveillance undermine the practicality and effectiveness of the approach. Furthermore, it has been reported that as many as 50% of COVID-19 infected patients had not had fever until the full-blown disease, thereby body temperature surveillance per se may not be sufficient to detect early disease progression.

In the past few decades, advances in sensor technology miniaturize electronic physiological sensors that could be incorporated into wearable devices allowing continuous monitoring of physiological parameters such as skin temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate, oxygen saturation, perspiration and activity of ambulatory subjects in a 24/7 basis. Together with current telecommunication platform capable of instantaneous and multi-directional massive data transfer, it is possible to remotely monitor a large number of individual subjects' physiological parameters in a real-time manner, and relay to managing physicians for timely intervention. Nonetheless, such potentials have not been fully explored in the real-world disease management. The current study will assess the impact of remote continuous real-time physiological monitoring using wearable armband device Everion® (Biofourmis, Singapore) and artificial intelligence-powered analytical platform Biovitals® Sentinel (Biofourmis, Singapore) on detection of disease progression in asymptomatic subjects with COVID-19 exposure under mandatory quarantine at designated facilities in Hong Kong. The research hypothesis is that by processing continuous physiological data collected using wearable device Everion® and patient reported outcomes with a cloud-based analytics platform Biovitals® Sentinel, it will possible to detect physiological changes and other clinically meaningful alerts that indicate early clinical progression in quarantined subjects with COVID-19 exposure.

The wearable vital sign monitor Everion® is capable to track multiple vitals sings including heart rate, heart rate variability, blood pulse variation, respiration rate under rest, activity, steps, skin temperature and etc. It is Bluetooth connected to a dedicated study-smartphone that allows remote transfer of all the physiological data captured by the wearable device in real time. A specially-designed application (APP) on the study-smartphone enables the patient to participate in health monitoring by reporting symptoms regularly and make aware of his/her physical and physiological patterns via the monitoring displays on the smart-phone. The patient's passive physiological data from the device and the active data on the symptoms and outcomes from Biovitals® analytics platform are automatically transferred to the monitoring console on the cloud. Thus, the Biofourmis platform solution is proposed to allow the monitoring team to effectively and remotely monitor COVID-19 patients and evaluate the disease progression. Leveraging Everion, the smartphone APP, Biovitals® analytics platform and the caregiver dashboard, biofourmis has built an end to end solution, Biovitals® Sentinel to remote monitor and manage the suspected subjects. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04343794
Study type Interventional
Source The University of Hong Kong
Contact David Siu, MD FRCP
Phone 22554694
Email cwdsiu@hku.hk
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date April 1, 2020
Completion date January 31, 2022

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05047692 - Safety and Immunogenicity Study of AdCLD-CoV19-1: A COVID-19 Preventive Vaccine in Healthy Volunteers Phase 1
Recruiting NCT04395768 - International ALLIANCE Study of Therapies to Prevent Progression of COVID-19 Phase 2
Completed NCT04506268 - COVID-19 SAFE Enrollment N/A
Terminated NCT04555096 - A Trial of GC4419 in Patients With Critical Illness Due to COVID-19 Phase 2
Completed NCT04508777 - COVID SAFE: COVID-19 Screening Assessment for Exposure
Completed NCT04961541 - Evaluation of the Safety and Immunogenicity of Influenza and COVID-19 Combination Vaccine Phase 1/Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT04546737 - Study of Morphological, Spectral and Metabolic Manifestations of Neurological Complications in Covid-19 Patients N/A
Completed NCT04494646 - BARCONA: A Study of Effects of Bardoxolone Methyl in Participants With SARS-Corona Virus-2 (COVID-19) Phase 2
Terminated NCT04581915 - PHRU CoV01 A Trial of Triazavirin (TZV) for the Treatment of Mild-moderate COVID-19 Phase 2/Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT04543006 - Persistence of Neutralizing Antibodies 6 and 12 Months After a Covid-19 N/A
Terminated NCT04542993 - Can SARS-CoV-2 Viral Load and COVID-19 Disease Severity be Reduced by Resveratrol-assisted Zinc Therapy Phase 2
Completed NCT04532294 - Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics, and Immunogenicity of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19) Neutralizing Antibody in Healthy Participants Phase 1
Not yet recruiting NCT04527211 - Effectiveness and Safety of Ivermectin for the Prevention of Covid-19 Infection in Colombian Health Personnel Phase 3
Completed NCT04507867 - Effect of a NSS to Reduce Complications in Patients With Covid-19 and Comorbidities in Stage III N/A
Completed NCT04537663 - Prevention Of Respiratory Tract Infection And Covid-19 Through BCG Vaccination In Vulnerable Older Adults Phase 4
Completed NCT04387292 - Ocular Sequelae of Patients Hospitalized for Respiratory Failure During the COVID-19 Epidemic N/A
Completed NCT04979858 - Reducing Spread of COVID-19 in a University Community Setting: Role of a Low-Cost Reusable Form-Fitting Fabric Mask N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05038449 - Study to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of Colchicine Tablets in Patients With COVID-19 N/A
Completed NCT04610502 - Efficacy and Safety of Two Hyperimmune Equine Anti Sars-CoV-2 Serum in COVID-19 Patients Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT06042855 - ACTIV-6: COVID-19 Study of Repurposed Medications - Arm G (Metformin) Phase 3