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Clinical Trial Summary

Among ambulatory peritoneal dialysis patients, does use of the Baxter AMIA peritoneal dialysis cycler with SHARESOURCE connectivity platform achieve dry weight targets better than use of the Baxter Home Choice Pro cycler.


Clinical Trial Description

The remote patient management system Baxter AMIA automated peritoneal dialysis system with SHARESOURCE connectivity platform incorporates innovative technology (two-way remote connectivity, touch screen controls, voice guidance) to record patient treatments which are then able to be transmitted to their dialysis clinic for review and monitoring in near real-time. This has tremendous potential clinical utility given the struggles to achieve dry weights for most peritoneal dialysis patients using other systems, where typically, management regarding fluid balance is reviewed and revised only monthly. The new technology is the only device cleared in the US with patient-centric features. Abstracts available have demonstrated that AMIA can improve efficiency of patient training and focus PD nursing time towards proactive tasks to help patients. There has also been insight into how remote patient management systems like AMIA can be used to objectively monitor patient compliance or catheter function above and beyond subjective endorsement from patients. However, with new technology comes new training for patient and staff (nurses, physicians) without understanding if interfacing with this new patient-centric featured technology improves patient-centric clinical outcomes. The new AMIA and SHARESOURCE programs may also require additional nurse and physician provider time to monitor data in real-time and to react to these data, which may incur additional expense to medical practices. Thus, it is imperative to demonstrate the utility of the AMIA and SHARESOURCE programs for important improvement in patient management, which may ultimately translate into improved clinical outcomes (e.g. fewer hospital admissions, less heart failure, improved quality, and length of life). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04002440
Study type Interventional
Source University of California, San Diego
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date November 8, 2018
Completion date April 2022

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