Congestive Heart Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
CHF Home Telemonitoring: A Home Telemonitoring Service for Chronic Heart Failure Patients on Trial
Providing patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) access to remote monitoring, for example
by telephone or telemonitoring using wireless technology, reduces deaths and
hospitalisations and may provide benefits on health care costs and quality of life. Remote
monitoring of patients with chronic heart failure can reduce pressure on resources,
particularly for conditions like chronic heart failure, which exert a large burden on health
services. These are conclusions of the Cochrane Systematic Review from 2010.
In Norway the costs for treatment of chronic heart failure are vast, both concerning
hospital treatment, daily use of medication over years, and loss of quality of life for
patients and their family caregivers. Generally there is little knowledge about what is
gained for the billions used. In Norway no telemonitoring services are established and hence
no investigations have yet been published. Thus it seems that current evidence of
effectiveness and quality is insufficient to recommend usage. The structure and funding
streams in Norwegian health services are different from other countries and the conventional
services that the intervention has been compared to in previous studies, are most likely
heterogeneous. It is thus important to investigate Norwegian conditions.
Advanced telemonitoring technology with electronic transfer of physiological data such as
blood pressure and weight is currently being used in research and established routine
services in several countries in Europe, amongst them the Netherlands, Germany and the
United Kingdom.
The proposed project intends to introduce such a strategy as an avenue for exploring
promising new services that would not otherwise be available in Norway. The service consists
of daily monitoring the patients' weight and blood pressure directly from their home;
automatically and securely transmit the values to a server at the University Hospital of
North Norway (UNN); and monitor the values by a trained nurse at the Heart polyclinic.
The primary objective of this study is thus to explore whether, as compared to current care
from the Heart Polyclinic, the introduction of home telemonitoring will reduce hospital
readmissions and will, in addition, be cost-effective. This is in line with current
directions of European telemonitoring programmes for patients with chronic heart failure.
This result may define if the telemonitoring of heart failure patients is feasible for
Norway or not at all.
All data collected by the equipment placed at the patient's home will be directly and
securely transferred to the Heart polyclinic of the University Hospital of North Norway
(UNN). All data is anonymous as explained below, only the weight and the codes with the
answers to the questionnaire are send.
Each day a nurse is assigned as responsible for the heart remote monitoring system. The
nurse in charge must read the heart remote monitoring email in the morning every day, seven
days a week. If an alert email has been received, then the nurse logs into the system's
dashboard and reads the data displayed there for that patient. Then the nurse will try to
phone the patient to clarify the situation. Until this moment the procedure protocol differs
from the ordinary routines as the notification of a case is usually raised by a phone call
from the patient or a hospitalisation. But from this moment on, the procedure protocol is
the same as for all patients treated by the Heart polyclinic, i.e. if the nurse evaluates
the situation to need a further follow-up, then the nurse contacts the patient's general
practitioner (GP) by phone (as said this is procedure as usual). The hospital's Heart
polyclinic has the same responsibility for the treatment of the patients, both in the
intervention arm and the control arm.
Each one of the patients assigned to the intervention arm will be following this procedure
during 6 months. For the patients assigned to the control arm they will receive treatment as
usual also during a period of 6 months. Data stored in the system is anonymised. All
patients are uniquely identified by a number, the Unique Identifier (UID), in the system,
the connection between the UID and the real identity being only stored in a file in a
secured personal computer unconnected from any network, staying in an office at the heart
polyclinic. Once a week, the UIDs' file stored in the study personal computer at the Heart
polyclinic is transferred to a hardware protected pen drive. The pen drive in then placed in
another building at the UNN. This procedure is of the responsibility of the UNN's department
for "E-health and information and communications technology (ICT)". In this way only two
copies of the file are stored in separate buildings. No reference to the study name is
mentioned in this file.
As a pilot study, a prototype of the platform was built. It consisted of a wireless weight
scale and also a blood pressure meter prepared to send the values through the home Wi-Fi
network to a connected portable computer. The portable computer could then send the
encrypted measurements to a server at UNN.
After the first two months of pilot testing, the patient was satisfied with the usability of
the solution and the reliability of the service was proven.
The platform deployed and tested in the pilot study has been extended to include
functionalities for multiple patients. A dashboard showing all the measurements received
(unidentified) has been developed for the polyclinic and used by the responsible clinician
(the nurse on daily duty). This data is unidentified and consists of a registration of blood
pressure and weight, the encoded answers to the questionnaire attached (example: Q3A2 means
that question 3 got the answer 2 in the questionnaire). The responsible nurse at the Heart
Polyclinic has access to the dashboard. When a situation requiring the nurse intervention
arises, the system sends an alerting email to a pre-defined address (usually the nurse's
email account as it will be done in this study).
The design of the randomized controlled trial (RCT) Power analysis The inclusion of 40
patients is based upon the total number of new patients served by the polyclinic per year
during the 2 last years. For this study a sample size was calculated based on a readmission
rate of 70% of the patients per year on average with a standard deviation of 20pp
(percentage points). The values are adequate, based on patients who have received treatment
within the Heart Polyclinic and also replicating the study by Antonicelli, published in the
Journal of telemedicine and Telecare "Impact of telemonitoring at home on the management of
elderly patients with congestive heart failure" in 2008.
It was assumed by the clinical team that a 1/3 reduction on the rate of readmissions (down
to 47%) would be clinically relevant as the margin of superiority for the intervention. To
have 95% certainty (power) that a test at 0.05 level of significance would find a
statistically significant difference between the means, the study would include a minimum of
20 patients in each group.
The planned RCT The telemonitoring service will be offered to all patients admitted at UNN's
Heart Polyclinic, satisfying the inclusion criteria. The study comprises an intervention arm
testing the proposed telemonitoring service and a control arm with the current treatment.
Patients assigned to the intervention arm receive a home telemonitoring kit consisting of a
tablet, a wireless weight scale and a portable blood pressure meter. The patient is asked to
weigh him- or herself every day and the monitoring procedure happens as previously
described. In addition a measurement of the blood pressure is also made.
Patients assigned to the control arm receive treatment as usual, consisting of a
recommendation to weigh themselves at home, using their own weight scale, and to report by
phone to the polyclinic if there is a significant change in weight.
The study calendar is shown below. Recruiting period: 14 months Follow-up period: 6 months
Number of patients: 40
Randomization: will be performed using sequentially numbered sealed opaque envelopes
Blinding: independent outcome assessors and data analysts are blinded to which group the
patient has been assigned to (patients are not blinded due to the nature of the
intervention).
Challenges and opportunities Qualitative research with semi structured interviews. Patients
in the intervention group and health care professionals will be asked to state their opinion
of the service. The research team will also observe patients' interactions with the system
after the 6 months of the study. A qualitative summary and thematic analysis of significant
features of opinions and actions will be connected to best practices. The purpose is to be
able to understand how best practices can be developed in the Northern Norwegian context,
and describe their mechanisms. The innovation intention is to adjust the services as they
develop, by considering the identified additional conditions for future development.
Ethics and privacy With recent events and advances in information technology and the
Internet, confidentiality regarding handling of patient private data has become a critical
aspect of a study design as privacy is a fundamental right in the public healthcare domain.
In this project confidentiality of private health information will be ensured according to
the Health Personnel Act § 21, helsepersonelloven § 21, and described in LOV2001-05-18 nr.24
(Helse- og omsorgsdepartementet, 2001). All private personal data will be de-identified:
every unique identifying number, characteristic, or code identifiers of the individual or of
relatives, employers, or household members of the individual will be removed so that the
information can be used alone or in combination with other information. The resulting data
will be analysed by a statistician to ensure that no individually identifiable health
information remains. The consent of participants will be required by means of providing a
letter of informed consent to be signed.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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