Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Clinical Trial
— DynAMITEOfficial title:
Utility of Device and App-based Mobile Health Monitoring as a Tool for Evaluation of Clinical Response to Therapies in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension
Verified date | May 2024 |
Source | Stanford University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
- Evaluate for accuracy and reproducibility of data collected via the participant-operated Walk.Talk.Track. (WTT) app combined with Apple Watch during in-clinic, technician proctored 6MWT's. - Determine whether the WTT app on the Apple Watch can accurately collect information on distance traveled and heart rate (HR) during in-clinic 6MWT run by American Thoracic Society (ATS) guidelines - Determine whether participants can operate the WTT app and Apple Watch effectively to gather accurate data in a monitored and home-based setting - Prospectively monitor for changes in WTT app recorded 6MWT results following initiation of therapy in a treatment naïve cohort of PAH participants - Evaluate whether changes from baseline in 6 minute walk distance (6MWD) and heart rate recovery at one minute (HRR1) as well as other variables that have been associated with disease severity in PAH and left-sided heart disease (resting HR, heart rate variability [HRV], chronotropic index [CI]) can be identified before the 12-week follow up when comparing the treatment arm and the control arm - Evaluate whether changes from baseline in the HRR1, resting HR, HRV and/or CI are more evident in treatment responders when compared to treatment non-responders.
Status | Active, not recruiting |
Enrollment | 63 |
Est. completion date | June 30, 2025 |
Est. primary completion date | June 30, 2025 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 70 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Diagnosis of WHO Group I Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH) (Idiopathic (I)PAH, Heritable PAH (including Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia), Associated (A)PAH (including collagen vascular disorders, drugs+toxins exposure, congenital heart disease, and portopulmonary disease). - Do not meet exclusion criteria Exclusion Criteria: - Pulmonary Hypertension due to left heart disease (PH-LHD, WHO group 2), Pulmonary hypertension due to chronic lung disease (PH-CLD, WHO group 3), Chronic thrombo-embolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH, WHO group 4), pulmonary hypertension with unclear and/or multi-factorial mechanisms (WHO goup 5) - Inability to perform a 6 minute walk test (6MWT) |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Stanford University | Stanford | California |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Stanford University | PHaware |
United States,
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* Note: There are 17 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | App/watch recorded and in-clinic recorded six minute walk distance (6MWD) | App/watch recorded and in-clinic recorded 6MWD will be compared by Bland Altman graph and will be considered interchangeable if the line of equality lands within the 95% confidence interval of the mean difference | 12 weeks | |
Primary | Count of participants with an increase of >32 meters in 6MWD from baseline as a measure of time to response to therapy | Hazard ratios will be calculated at two week intervals to evaluate for between group differences | 12 weeks | |
Primary | Count of participants with an increase of >3bpm in heart rate recovery at one minute (HRR1) from baseline as a measure of time to response to therapy | HRR1 is calculated as peak heart rate (pHR) - HR one minute into recovery period. Hazard ratios will be calculated at two week intervals to evaluate for between group differences | 12 weeks | |
Secondary | Count of participants with a decrease of >5bpm in resting HR from baseline as a measure of time to response to therapy | Hazard ratios will be calculated at two week intervals to evaluate for between group differences | 12 weeks | |
Secondary | Count of participants with an increase of >5ms in heart rate variability (HRV) from baseline as a measure of time to response to therapy | HRV will be calculated as the standard deviation of R wave to R wave intervals (SDNN) over the 2 minute period following exercise. Hazard ratios will be calculated at two week intervals to evaluate for between group differences | 12 weeks | |
Secondary | Count of participants with an increase of >5% in chronotropic index (CI) from baseline as a measure of time to response to therapy | CI will be calculated as (actual peak HR - resting HR)/(Age predicted peak HR [220-age] - resting HR). Hazard ratios will be calculated at two week intervals to evaluate for between group differences | 12 weeks | |
Secondary | Within the treatment arm, count of participants with an increase of >3bpm in heart rate recovery at one minute (HRR1) from baseline when comparing medication responders vs non-responders | Medication responders will have a =32m improvement in 6MWD at 12 weeks; non-responders will have <32m improvement. Hazard ratios will be calculated at two week intervals to evaluate for between group differences | 12 weeks | |
Secondary | Within the treatment arm, count of participants with a decrease of >5bpm in resting HR from baseline when comparing medication responders vs non-responders | Medication responders will have a =32m improvement in 6MWD at 12 weeks; non-responders will have <32m improvement. Hazard ratios will be calculated at two week intervals to evaluate for between group differences | 12 weeks | |
Secondary | Within the treatment arm, count of participants with an increase of >5ms in heart rate variability (HRV) from baseline when comparing medication responders vs non-responders | Medication responders will have a =32m improvement in 6MWD at 12 weeks; non-responders will have <32m improvement. Hazard ratios will be calculated at two week intervals to evaluate for between group differences | 12 weeks | |
Secondary | Within the treatment arm, count of participants with an increase of >5% in chronotropic index (CI) from baseline when comparing medication responders vs non-responders | Medication responders will have a =32m improvement in 6MWD at 12 weeks; non-responders will have <32m improvement. Hazard ratios will be calculated at two week intervals to evaluate for between group differences | 12 weeks | |
Secondary | Between group difference in 6MWD as a measure of response to the intervention | A two-sample T-test will be performed on the delta change in 6MWD (week 12 - baseline / baseline) x100]) between the treatment and control groups and a p-value will be calculated from this data. | 12 weeks |
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