Glaucoma Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Novel Eye Drop Application Monitor to Assess Patient Compliance With a Prescribed Regimen
The purpose of this study is to determine if an eye drop video monitoring device can accurately assess (as compared to a patient's own log or a proprietary software) the exact amount and time of eye drop delivery to a patient's eye. It is our belief that the experimental device will help patients to be more compliant by: 1) providing a viewable format so patients can see what is happening when they are applying their drops 2) providing greater accuracy to doctors regarding when and how much medication was used 3) providing greater accuracy to doctors and patients regarding how much medication was actually delivered to a patients eye.
Subjects who agree to participate in this study will sign the informed consent form prior to
the initiation of any research related procedures. Subjects will be consented by a study
coordinator, their physician, or one of the physicians' staff with a strong knowledge of the
purpose and design of the clinical trial. There will be two phases to this study: one phase
will take place in the clinic, the other will take place at the subjects home. Each subject
will participate in each phase. The at home phase will have two arms: one where the subjects
are in phase 2 for 1 week, and one where they are in phase 2 for 4 weeks. It is initially
anticipated that the 1 week arm will be enrolled first. As the results of the phase 1 come
in and patients and physicians get an idea of the ease of using the system, phase 2 will be
enrolled. Consented patients who were prescribed an eye drop medication regimen consisting
of 1-5 different eye drop medications daily will be asked to participate in this study.
Consent and technician assessment will be done by the subject's normal clinician or their
designated clinical technician/trial coordinator, all of whom will have been certified for
human clinical trials by the Lee Memorial Health System.
The first phase will take place under the controlled clinic environment, where we will
assess the ability of the device and reading center to accurately determine the number and
volume of drops that get into the eye and the time at which they are instilled as well as
log them in an easy to use directory. Five hundred patients, and their designated caregiver
if they are unable to apply the drops themselves, will be equipped with the EDAM, trained to
use the device, and asked to dispense 10 drops of saline into their eye while in the clinic
and being observed by a trained ophthalmic technician. During the application procedure,
patients or their designated caregiver, and the observing clinical technician will be asked
to write down how many drops were dispensed and if the drop landed in the eye, outside the
eye, or half in and half out. All EDAM devices will be returned to the reading center at the
Retina Health Center following each use or at the end of each day, along with the subject
and technician questionnaires for further assessment. All data will be removed and cleared
from the device by the reading center and stored on their secure servers. EDAMs will then be
returned to the clinic where they came from for use on other subjects. Accuracy of the
written logs (both patients/caregivers and technicians) will be compared to logs created by
a technician at the reading center after viewing the application procedure in slow motion
and to the read-outs from the drop assessment software.
For the second phase of the trial, these same 500 patients (and their designated caregivers)
will be asked to use the EDAM at home for all drop applications for 7 or 28 consecutive days
(50 in each group). Patients will be assigned initially to the one week group for short term
evaluation of the device and to confirm the ease of use, and safety. Once each patient has
completed 1 week of use without any complications, their physician may assign patients to
either the four week group or the one week group (if the one week group, they will be done
with the study) at their discretion. At the end of each week, subjects and their designated
caregivers will be asked to return the EDAM to their clinic which will provide the device to
the reading center based at the Retina Health Center. As in the clinical arm, all data will
be removed and cleared from the EDAM devices by the reading center and stored on their
secure servers for further assessment. EDAMs will then be returned to the clinic where they
came from for use on other subjects. At this time, the subject and/or their designated
caregiver will also be asked to complete another study questionnaire which will take 5-10
minutes (see appended questionnaire).
Since this is a pilot and exploratory study, it is desirable to allow flexibility to try and
identify issues that may develop in both groups prior to undertaking a longer or larger
study. Patients will be asked to use the drops routinely. The goal is to see if the EDAM is
easy to use, if it captures the desired data, and to get an idea as to patient compliance in
a random group of patients. As mentioned, at the end of each week, the patient (with their
designated caregiver if applicable) will return to the clinic so a technician can download
the accumulated videos and create a log documenting each drop procedure by noting whether
each drop made it fully into the eye, half in, not in at all, or if they were unable to make
an accurate assessment even with the video recording. This log will be viewed by the
physician. The designated care giver may change between eye drop application procedures, but
all care givers who assisted in the eye drop procedures must return with the subject to
complete a study questionnaire.
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