Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05725772 |
Other study ID # |
274510 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
December 13, 2022 |
Est. completion date |
December 30, 2023 |
Study information
Verified date |
January 2024 |
Source |
University of Arkansas |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The goal of this observational study is to compare the ability to perform telemedicine visits
at home, at a regional clinic close to home, and in-person in People with Parkinson's
disease. The main question it aims to answer is whether telemedicine assessments provide high
quality care to people with Parkinson's disease. Participants will perform a regular clinic
visit followed by research evaluations of their disease. Researchers will compare the results
of these assessments at the different visit types to see if there are differences in the
results.
Description:
The purpose of the current project is to determine whether care for people with Parkinson's
disease can be performed as well using telemedicine as it can be when people visit their
neurologist in-person. We hope that the findings from this project will help 1) improve the
quality and access of healthcare to those parts of Arkansas where access may be limited, 2)
decrease the costs of healthcare in movement disorders, and 3) allow more people with
Parkinson's disease to feel like they are participating in finding a cure by taking part in
research. It will also allow us to improve on ways to collect information from people with
Parkinson's, even in their own homes, to help us design future research studies. This will be
important to help develop treatments that are for each person, not just the disease as a
whole.
Specific Aims of the Study:
AIM 1: To determine whether telehealth assessments provide high quality care to people with
Parkinson's disease. We will do this by performing and comparing the results of assessments
that are regularly used in clinics and in research repeated in 3 different settings, at-home
via telehealth, at a regional center via telehealth, and in-person at UAMS.
AIM 2: To improve tools for studying large collections of information that are collected
using multiple different methods. We will do this by using a health information database that
we have developed for this purpose. We will use voice and handwriting analysis compared in
the three different settings to develop ways to track disease progression in Parkinson's
disease.
How we plan to accomplish those Aims:
All people with Parkinson's who agree to participate will have their regular clinical visits
with Dr. Tuhin Virmani or Dr. Rohit Dhall at home and at a UAMS regional clinic center near
their homes. Following the clinic portion of the visit they will provide a sample of their
speech and handwriting, undergo a timed walk, have their thinking ability tested, and fill
out some questionnaires and surveys about their mood, anxiety, quality of life, and sleep
quality. They will also be asked to complete surveys to allow us to determine who they feel
the quality of each visit type was and at the end compare one to the other. These different
sources of information from each person will then be combined together and stored in our
database, and used by the research team to develop new tools to combine and compare such
different types of information to better treat people with Parkinson's Disease in the future.