Heart Failure Clinical Trial
— FATIGUEOfficial title:
Understanding Patterns of Fatigue in Health and Disease
Verified date | February 2024 |
Source | University of Aberdeen |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Observational |
Fatigue is a common symptom and can be the most distressing symptom of a range of medical conditions. This Ecological Momentary Assessment study will investigate lived experiences of fatigue in detail in individuals with myeloma, long COVID, heart failure, and in healthy controls without fatigue. Participants will wear ECG patches and wrist-worn sensors that measure heart rate variability, activity levels, posture, and other parameters. They will self-rate their levels of fatigue four times daily and on-demand (when fatigue levels are noticeably good or troublesome). They will participate in an end of study interview and will have an optional feedback session with a researcher to make sense of the data they have provided.
Status | Active, not recruiting |
Enrollment | 40 |
Est. completion date | March 30, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | December 18, 2023 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - For all groups, participants will be included if they are willing to participate in intermittent ecological momentary assessments of fatigue, to wear an ECG patch, to provide questionnaire responses at baseline, and the end of the study, and to participate in an end of study interview. Inclusion Criteria for Group A, individuals with myeloma - A confirmed diagnosis of myeloma - Has experienced fatigue that is perceived by the participant to be worse than "normal tiredness" and that they associate with myeloma or treatment for myeloma Inclusion Criteria for Group B, heart failure - A formal diagnosis of heart failure - All stages of heart failure and all aetiologies and with no specific ejection fraction cut-off - Has experienced fatigue that is perceived by the participant to be worse than "normal tiredness" and that they associate with their cardiac disease or its treatment Inclusion Criteria for Group C, long COVID - Experiencing fatigue that is perceived by the participant to be worse than "normal tiredness", with or without other physical or psychological symptoms that developed during or after an infection consistent with COVID-19 - The fatigue (plus or minus any other symptoms) has continued for greater or equal to 12 weeks, and is not explained by an alternative diagnosis Inclusion criteria for Group D, control group • Individuals aged 18 years or over without the disease conditions specified in Groups A to C Exclusion Criteria: - Exclusion Criteria Applying to all participants: - Difficulty communicating in English - Adults lacking capacity to consent - Under 18 years of age - Declines to participate - Under investigation for or starting treatment for an endocrine, metabolic, or thyroid condition where the participant has not been established on a stable therapeutic dose of a licensed therapy for that condition - A confirmed diagnosis of sleep apnoea or narcolepsy - HADs depression and anxiety score at baseline greater than 8 on the depression questions, which might indicate untreated or undertreated depression - Shift work that involves overnight working between the hours of 9pm and 9am We will not exclude patient participants in groups A to C based on the type of prescribed medications that they are taking. Instead, this will be carefully documented. For Group A, myeloma - Uncontrolled hypercalcaemia - Current or previous diagnosis of heart failure or long COVID - An active primary cancer diagnosis other than myeloma Group B Heart Failure - A current or previous diagnosis of myeloma or long COVID - Active cancer Group C, long COVID - A current or previous diagnosis of myeloma or heart failure - Active cancer Group D, Control group - Presence of myeloma or another active cancer, heart failure, or long COVID - One or more chronic medical conditions which are unstable, poorly controlled, AND perceived by the individual to be causing fatigue - Persistent or severe fatigue symptoms that are perceived by the individual to be worse than "normal tiredness" - Taking sedating medications to manage anxiety or insomnia including but not limited to benzodiazepines or "Z" drugs, zopiclone, zolpidem, and others in this British National Formulary Class. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | University of Aberdeen | Aberdeen | UK |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Aberdeen | Lancaster University, University College, London, University of Cambridge, University of Glasgow, University of Southampton |
United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Cognitive and physical fatigue screen (zero to ten point rating) | Fatigue screen based on "state" items from the validated Mental and Physical State and Trait Energy and Fatigue Scale (O'Connor P. University of Georgia; 2006). Participants will self-report their fatigue at that moment (split into physical and cognitive/mental fatigue) on a 0-10 point numerical rating scale, anchored with "I feel no fatigue" = 0 and "strongest feeling of fatigue ever" = 10. Participants will be prompted to respond via an app four times daily and can also provide on-demand ratings when their fatigue levels are particularly problematic or when they are not experiencing problematic fatigue. Multilevel modelling will be conducted to identify changes in fatigue over time and to explore the relationships between self-reported fatigue scores and sleep, activity levels (step-count, posture, measured by wrist worn sensor), respiratory rate (measured by ECG patch), and heart rate variability (measured by ECG patch) | Two to four weeks (participant defined) | |
Primary | Lived experiences of fatigue interview | Qualitative data collected by an end of study interview according to a topic schedule | 1 day (End of study interview) | |
Primary | Views and opinions about the sensing technologies interview | Qualitative data collected by an end of study interview according to a topic schedule | 1 day (End of study interview) | |
Primary | Views and opinions about the trial methods and study participation interview | Qualitative data collected by an end of study interview according to a topic schedule | 1 day (End of study interview) | |
Secondary | Drop-out rate | The proportion of participants who drop out of the study before the end of study interview | Participant-led study end date - two to four weeks |
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