Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04857814 |
Other study ID # |
Pro00097162 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
July 1, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
March 1, 2023 |
Study information
Verified date |
April 2023 |
Source |
University of Alberta |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Lung diseases are one of the most common causes of emergency room visits. There are very few
tools that are able to predict which patients will have a worsening or increasing severity of
their condition. There are also limited ways to check the health of patients with respiratory
conditions at home and during the time between medical appointments.
The ADAMM-RSMTM device records heart rate, breathing rate, temperature, cough and activity
while wearing it. This study will test participants willingness to wear the device and
perform ongoing monitoring to assess the possibility to predict the onset and increases in
severity of their lung conditions.
Description:
The project will aim to create the infrastructure to collect clinical data and participants
reported biometric measures (ePReBMs) from wearable devices in a database, and to run a pilot
phase with a limited number of participants. During this phase, the feasibility of a
long-term (6 months) home monitoring of respiratory parameters with the wearable device
ADAMM-RSM (Health Care Originals, Rochester, NY, USA) will be tested, in parallel with the
standard of care, in a limited number of participants with progressive fibrosing interstitial
disease (PF-ILD) including idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), lung transplant, cystic
fibrosis (CF) and bronchiectasis, and tuberculosis (TB). The study design will test the
possibility to collect data from ADAMM-RSM: ideally, the participants should wear the
ADAMM-RSM every day, for at least 8 hours. For the purpose of this study, the investigators
will aim to collect data from the device for every participant at least 3 days per week, at
least 8 hours per day, for a period of 6 months.
The duration of this study is estimated in 2 years, including the data analysis. The
participants will be provided the due information about the study and they will sign a
written consent before enrolment (a copy is attached to the application to the Research
Ethics Office of the University of Alberta).
Every participant enrolled in the study will be asked to wear the ADAMM-RSM (Health Care
Originals, Rochester, NY, USA) device every day for 6 months.
The wearable device includes a non-invasive biosensor and processor that is attached to the
surface of the skin using an adhesive sticker. It is designed to measure physical activity,
heart rate, respiration, skin temperature, and cough metrics using embedded audio
transducers, thermistor, accelerometer, gyroscope, and magnetometer. It can be applied
anywhere on the chest, with a single-use, changeable sticker. As such, the device is able to
collect heart and respiratory rate, temperature and cough, and to correlate these parameters
to rest, activity and intensity of activity for the duration of the battery (18 hours). After
signing the informed consent, the participants will be instructed on how to apply and to
remove the device on/from the chest, to use the device during the day, and to recharge it at
night using its dedicated charger.
Every device is supplied with a unique anonymous identifier, and will transmit the data via
Wi-Fi to a cloud secured database provided by Health Care Originals (Health Care Originals,
Rochester, NY, USA). This database will be physically located in a server within the Canadian
borders. The database will be moved to a secured server at the University of Alberta at the
end of the study.
Potential registrations of speech during cough episodes are prevented by an integrated
algorithm in the device, cleaning automatically any sound other than cough before
transferring the data to the cloud server.
Local research coordinators will use a web-based portal to check the usage of the devices and
that the devices are working properly. This portal does not include personal data of the
participants but only the device identifier so matching back of actual patient to data stream
will not occur on any of Healthcare Originals infrastructure.
A unique progressive study ID will be assigned to every participant entering the study. This
ID will be coupled to the ADAMM-RSM identifier and it will be used in a separate database to
collect clinical and follow-up data. The ID will be coupled to participants identifiers only
in a third excel file, encrypted and protected with a password that will be accessible only
to the study investigators.
The participants will be requested to fill 3 quality of life questionnaires (the King's Brief
Interstitial Lung Disease questionnaire for PF-ILD or Saint George Respiratory Questionnaire
for the other diagnoses, the Leicester Cough Questionnaire and the MRC dyspnea questionnaire
for all the enrolled patients) at the time of enrolment, and after 3 and 6 months. The
questionnaires will be used to compare responses at 3 and 6 months to the data generated from
the device. Participants will be asked to return the device to the study site at the 6-month
timepoint. Clinical data will be collected from the participant's chart if available at the
baseline, 3, and 6 month timepoints as per the CRF's.