Asthma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Developing an Automated Symptom Monitoring Device for Adolescents With Asthma
This study will examine an innovative strategy to monitor asthma symptoms by using existing technology to develop a non-invasive device for monitoring asthma symptoms in adolescents. Using an iPod as a platform, and current sound data analysis techniques, a prototype device will be developed that will directly monitor the chosen parameters of asthma symptoms, including wheezing, coughing and activity levels. This small non-invasive device will be continuously carried by or placed in close proximity to the adolescent on a daily basis. It is hypothesized that such a device would be acceptable to adolescents and would lend accuracy and objectivity to symptom assessment; something that existing monitoring strategies have yet to achieve. It will also stimulate the adolescents' partnership in asthma self-monitoring and ultimately lead to effective asthma management.
Prior research has generated compelling evidence that programs promoting self-management can
reduce morbidity and improve asthma outcomes in children. Successful asthma management
strategies require patients' active commitment to engage in care processes by establishing
self-monitoring routines. Adequate self-monitoring of asthma symptoms is considered to be
the cornerstone of appropriate asthma management leading to fewer cases of asthma
exacerbation and acute care visits as well as better functional outcomes and higher quality
of life in children and adolescents. Symptom monitoring informs patient decisions to
initiate necessary self-management behaviors (e.g., adjust medication, alter activity level,
alter the surrounding environment or seek medical assistance) as well as the providers'
decisions related to an appropriate treatment course such as step up, no change or step down
therapy. Thus, current guidelines by National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Expert Panel Review 3 (EPR3) highlight the importance of ongoing symptom monitoring.
Studies of children have raised concerns about adequacy and effectiveness of current methods
of asthma self-monitoring including symptom-based and peak expiratory flow (PEF) monitoring.
Symptom-based monitoring relies on the individual's symptom perception which is subjective
and influenced by a variety of factors such as the patient's emotional status, social
influences (e.g, family, peers) and previous experiences with symptoms. Thus, the accuracy
and objectivity of this monitoring method is uncertain. As an objective approach, PEF
monitoring has been encouraged, yet the efficacy of this method has also been a subject of
ongoing debate in the literature. Poor adherence and inadequate technique further diminish
the clinical usefulness of PEF monitoring. Thus, the uncertainty of current monitoring
strategies underscores the imperative of an alternative symptom monitoring strategy that
addresses the issues of accuracy and objectivity of symptom assessment.
Adolescence is an important period for consolidating and establishing self-management of and
adjustment to chronic health conditions. Yet an array of developmental challenges including
the desire for normalcy and peer approval, feelings of invulnerability and emerging
independence undermine adolescents' motivation and behaviors to engage in self-management
and present particular difficulties in achieving optimal asthma control in adolescents with
asthma. Parents become less able to manage asthma as children reach adolescence and many
researchers and clinicians have reported similar difficulties in managing asthma in
adolescents primarily due to inadequate adherence and counterproductive behaviors. Thus,
clinicians face serious challenges in providing optimal management for adolescents with
asthma primarily due to difficulties in soliciting patients' active partnership in asthma
management with sustainable and reliable symptom monitoring routines. Accurate symptom
monitoring by patients is the most fundamental antecedent to effective asthma management,
yet existing monitoring strategies have not been conducive to adolescents' cooperation or
yielded accurate or clinically useful information. Having recognized these limitations, this
study will examine an innovative strategy to monitor asthma symptoms that stimulates
adolescents' partnership and ultimately leads to effective asthma management.
The device will directly monitor the chosen parameters of asthma symptoms, including
wheezing, coughing and activity levels. A mobile phone will be employed as a platform for
processing, analyzing and storing data transmitted from a microphone and a wireless
accelerometer. This new approach is developmentally appropriate, given adolescents' affinity
for technology and its capacity to address adolescents' need for maintaining normalcy while
allowing continuous asthma monitoring during real-life situations. The device involves
biomedical engineering techniques enabling automatic sound and activity recording, analysis,
feedback, and storage function. A mobile phone will be employed as a platform for
processing, analyzing and storing data transmitted from a microphone and a wireless
accelerometer. This technology will automate daily symptom monitoring with minimal
intrusiveness and maximum accuracy, thereby reducing the risk of inappropriate treatment and
ameliorating asthma-related disability. Due to its foreseen safety, noninvasiveness,
objectivity, convenience, user-friendliness, and cost containment, the approach can greatly
enhance asthma management by adolescents and health care providers. This device has the
potential to bring about patient behavior changes such as avoiding triggers and adjusting
medications as the device will provide the opportunity for in-time review of symptoms.
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