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Clinical Trial Summary

ADLIFE is a EU-funded project developing innovative digital health solutions to support healthcare planning and care delivery for patients with advanced chronic conditions (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and/or heart disease failure). ADLIFE's technology innovations will be deployed, used and evaluated in seven healthcare environments in Spain, the UK, Sweden, Germany, Denmark, and Israel. ADLIFE intends to impact three stakeholders: patients, informal caregivers and health professionals, and consequently across the seven participating international healthcare systems. ADLIFE intervention aims at slowing down the patients' functional deterioration, ensuring their quality of life and promoting shared decision making, reducing the caregiver burden, and improving the health professional working conditions; all this under the scenario of an improvement in the healthcare resource use. The research aims to prove whether the ADLIFE intervention can deliver appropriate targeted and timely care for patients with severe long-term diseases when applied in real-life settings. Based on a mixed-method approach, the study will provide scientific evidence based on the effectiveness, socio-economic, implementation and technology acceptance assessment of ADLIFE compared to the standard of care (SoC) to provide scientific evidence supporting the funding decision-making of the ADLIFE intervention.


Clinical Trial Description

The ADLIFE project (GA 875209) is funded by the EC and Co-ordinated by Kronikgune Institute for Health Services Research. The consortium is made up of a total of 12 partners, supplying technical, clinical & research expertise. These partners are based in the UK, Spain, Sweden, Denmark, Turkey, Israel, Poland, Belgium and Germany. The research project ADLIFE aims to develop and implement innovative, personalised and digital solutions for the integrated healthcare of elderly people with advanced chronic diseases, especially for patients with COPD and/or chronic heart failure (www.adlifeproject.com). The digital solutions (ADLIFE toolbox) involves two interconnected platforms: the Patient Empowerment Platform (PEP), used by patients and informal caregivers and the Personalised Care Plan Management Platform (PCPMP) used by healthcare professionals. In addition, PCPMP includes a Service to assist clinical decision support (CDSS). The work plan of the project is structured in three phases. The 1st phase addresses the Organizational issues and ICT platforms implementation. The 2nd phase focuses on the Intervention's large-scale deployment. ADLIFE intervention will be implemented in seven regions representing six different countries, involving patients, informal caregivers and healthcare professionals. The 3rd and last phase will conduct an evaluation where ADLIFE scientific question will be answered. The main research question is - "When applied in real-life settings, is the use of the ADLIFE toolbox able to deliver appropriate targeted and timely care for patients with Advanced Chronic Diseases?". Care will be considered appropriate when it is deployed at the time and in the way is needed in order to generate the best possible gain in health and quality of life. The scientific question reflects the complex innovation intervention and three complementary evaluation approaches will be used: - An effectiveness assessment will be conducted to estimate the ADLIFE intervention impact compared to the Standard of care, applying mixed methods combining quantitative and qualitative analysis. - A socio-economic impact assessment will estimate the long-term economic impact of the ADLIFE intervention compared to the Standard of care, applying a budget impact analysis based on simulation modelling. - An implementation assessment will be performed under three different perspectives: the implementation of the research project itself will be assessed as well as the contextual factors that are relevant for the translation of the innovation action into routine practice and the acceptance of the technology and adoption evaluation. The study is aiming to recruit a minimum of 846 patients, 1183 informal caregivers and 679 healthcare professionals to the ADLIFE pilot study across all seven pilot sites. in Basque Country (Osakidetza), United Kingdom (National Health Service Lanarkshire and University Hospital Coventry & Warwickshire - National Health Service Trust), Denmark (Odense University Hospital), Germany (Gesunder Werra-Meißner Kreis), Sweden (Region Jämtland Härjedalen) and Israel (Assuta Ashdod Hospital - Maccabi Healthcare Services Southern Region). The ADLIFE intervention consists of the deployment and use of the ADLIFE toolbox by patients, informal caregivers and health professionals in the aforementioned pilot settings. The intervention starts in December 2022. The project envisages a three-month window from the start of the intervention to achieve the total number of patients recruited. During the study period, patients will have a personalised care plan, created in the ADLIFE toolbox, which will be developed and managed together with their healthcare professionals. The main task of patients and informal caregivers will be to use the ADLIFE toolbox as part of their healthcare process together with their healthcare professionals. All participants will be trained in the use of the platforms and their participation prior to the start of the study. The intervention will end in November 2023, after which the evaluation will be carried out to analyse the feasibility and benefits of the ADLIFE solution. ADLIFE will comply with the data protection legislation of the European Union GDPR and additional legislation in each country on health care data and medical research. Informed consent to participate in the study will be obtained from intervention patients. The patients who are recruited will receive care and treatment using the ADLIFE system, will have identifiable data collected about them by healthcare professionals in PCPMP, and will use, and provide information about themselves, in the PEP system. In addition to the clinical data captured, the intervention group patients, their carers and the healthcare professionals involved in the project will participate in a series of system/project evaluations before and after the study. A separate cohort of patients will be identified retrospectively from local health records at the end of the study to create a 'control' group. These patients will match the same inclusion criteria. However, this control group will have no active role in the study (they will follow the standard of care of their organization) and only their anonymised data will be utilized so that health-related outcomes, resource utilisation, medication use, etc., can be compared for the two groups over the same period. Evaluation analyses will be carried out with control data and intervention data collected in each pilot site. The data for project evaluation purposes will only be available to the site from which the data originated, it will be kept within the healthcare provider infrastructure. For the evaluation process, these data will be coded protected in order to reduce risks. The healthcare utilisation and outcome data collected from intervention patients will be extracted from the ADLIFE system itself in a pseudonymised format. Data from control data will be collected from local health records systems in an anonymized format. The relevant individual-level data for study evaluation will be processed and will be sent to the evaluation partners to carry out the clinical evaluations of the ADLIFE solution. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05575336
Study type Interventional
Source Kronikgune
Contact Dolores Verdoy
Phone +34 944007797
Email dverdoy@kronikgune.org
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date February 1, 2023
Completion date June 30, 2024

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