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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Not yet recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03975881
Other study ID # RC18_0038
Secondary ID
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date June 1, 2019
Est. completion date December 1, 2020

Study information

Verified date May 2019
Source Nantes University Hospital
Contact Fanny GOLLIER BRIANT
Phone 0253482653
Email fanny.gollierbriant@chu-nantes.fr
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Context: Suicide is the 2nd cause of death during adolescence Compliance with post SA care is low and variable with effective compliance ranging from 17.5% to 47% . Therefore, prevention programs should also focus on high-risk individuals with a previous history of SA.

Adolescents and young adults are considered to be digital natives, they are therefore a relevant population for the testing of Smartphone Application.

Project: The Investigators propose an innovative and new approach to prevent SA and Suicide for patients, based on a mobile healthcare application.

The program is an add-on to the usual care process.

Study: In a multicentric randomized pilot study with 15 to 35 years-old patients having previous SA, the primary goal for pilot study is to observe the filling rate of the application (feasibility).


Description:

Suicide is the 2nd cause of death during adolescence in Europe (1.200/year, 7.9 % of deaths in this age group) and the prevalence of Lifetime Suicide Attempts (SA) in this population is 4.2%. Within a year of the SA, the repetition rate in adolescent populations ranges from 15% to 28%.

Post-SA management is crucial and treatment compliance is a major concern in adolescent populations. A French consensus psychiatric workgroup recommends that when patient is discharged from emergency room (ER) or hospitalization, it is important to organize health care. Unfortunately, these recommendations are imprecise and, moreover, from 40 to 77% of adolescents with previous SAs do not follow the recommendations of the post crisis program. In real clinical practice, patients barely follow the recommended treatment.

Reducing the SA repetition rate and increasing compliance with the recommended post-crisis program are two synergic issues.

The incredible and recent adoption of smartphone health applications (apps), that collect data (weight, exercises…) and allow the consumer to see graphs and diagrams, illustrates the sociological and psychological power of digital self-care and self-management. This phenomenon is particularly important for adolescents and young adults, who are considered to be digital natives. Medical experience is mainly based on the idea that is could be very useful to ask the patient to fill in scales or questionnaires on his/her smartphone instead of on a computer or a paper sheet. This is called Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) as it is a naturalistic method to access clinical data.

There are a few positive experiments in self-management (or self-care) using smartphone applications in psychiatry. In the field of suicide and mood disorders they have very interesting and promising results (high filling rates and better compliance to heath care programs). However, despite a few self-care aspects most of these apps are based on psycho-education programs and suffer in reality from lack of feedback.

Second field of apps use is Ecological Momentary intervention (EMI). Main idea is to use EMA data in algorithm in order to produce personalized comments and advises for patients. With the development of machine learning, it is obvious that EMI will have great implication in the future. There are few experiences with EMI but recent reviews all suggest that it is results are promising in mood disorders and anxiety.

The investigators are proposing an EMA + EMI new approach to prevent patient SA and Suicide based on a mobile healthcare application. This application is not connected. This is noticeably different then connected approach, using connected technology (phone, visual-phone and text messages) such as the Suicide Intervention Assisted by Message (SIAM) program, with text messages sent (sometimes automatically) by healthcare professionals to high-risk suicide subjects has shown positive preliminary results, with a reduced repetition rate. The App will be customised for each user when redeemed with a personal code provided by the practitioner. The App will collect data from the patient regarding anxiety, mood and sleep disorders twice a day (with a decreased frequence along the period of use), essentially based on analogic visual scales and drop-down lists. An algorithm-based feedback will pro-actively inform the patient with comments and advice based on WHO recommendations and/or associated with self-coping or Mindfulness practices. The aim is to position the smartphone application like a health care partner, it's name will be Medical Companion.

In order to assess the efficiency of the complete app the investigators will first lead a multicentre open pilot study with 6 months of follow-up in an adolescents and young adults population with a history of suicide attempts.

The application is an association of a "conventional" EMA program and an innovative algorithm-based response to the patient. Built on the notion of self-care, this app is not connected and the patient's responses are processed in the algorithm: (i) to provide feed-back regarding their mental state (contextualized, i.e. "you seem to be less anxious then yesterday") and, (ii) to advice them about what to do (for example "call a friend" "breath deeply 5 times in a row"…). Each mental status will be analysed by the Bayesian application algorithm. Regular evaluations are also provided on screen with easy to see graphs that might be viewed by the patient. These graphs could (and should) be seen by the psychiatrist, or psychologist involved in the Care as Usual program that all participants will still have. In sum, medical practitioners involved in the patient's usual care will have access to synthetic presentation of patient's responses and the investigators plan to ask participants about their experience.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Not yet recruiting
Enrollment 80
Est. completion date December 1, 2020
Est. primary completion date December 1, 2020
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 15 Years to 35 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Boy or girl, aged 15 to 35 years and having made a suicide attempt within 96 hours requiring emergency admission.

- Informed and signed consent of patient and parents (if applicable)

- Patient affiliated to social security

Exclusion Criteria:

- Patient with a severe psychiatric condition such as, schizophrenia, autistic spectrum disorder and antecedent of more than one suicide attempt (not counting this).

- Patient without smartphone under iOS (mobile operating system developed by Apple) or Android, or without easy access (eg boarding school, social center ...)

- Patient with an intellectual disability making it impossible to use the application (clinically estimated).

- Absence of motivation in relation to the study.

- Patient who does not want or can not give informed consent or understand it.

- Patient whose follow-up seems difficult for psychological, geographical or social reasons, according to the judgment of the investigator

- Not affiliated to social security

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
application on smartphone
The aim of this study is to test the feasibility of our approach of preventing suicide relapse with the use of a smartphone application.

Locations

Country Name City State
France CHU d'Angers Angers
France CH Poitiers Poitiers
France CH Rennes Rennes

Sponsors (6)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Nantes University Hospital Poitiers University Hospital, Rennes University Hospital, Saint Antoine University Hospital, Université de Nantes, University Hospital, Angers

Country where clinical trial is conducted

France, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Evaluate the usage rate of the Medical Companion application over a period of 6 months. Ratio calculation (r) : r = (number of uses done) / (number of uses expected) 6 months
Secondary Evaluation of the use rate of the application over 6 months Frequency of use of the application, data generated automatically by the internal program of the application Medical Companion 6 months
Secondary Evaluation of the use rate of the application over 6 months duration of use of the application 6 months
Secondary Evaluation of suicidal ideation after 6 months of use of the application, Rate of suicidal ideation at 6 months assessed by telephone call in families using ( 1 to 7) 6 months
Secondary Evaluation of suicidal recidivism at 6 months Rate of suicidal recidivism at 6 months evaluated by phone call in families 6 months
Secondary Assessment of the compliance rate at recommended care Rate of compliance to recommended care at discharge from hospital (number of appointments honored) 6 months
Secondary Assessment of the compliance rate at recommended care Rate of compliance to recommended care at 6 months evaluated by phone call in families 6 months
Secondary Evaluation of the evolution of the level of sadness of the subject during the 6 months of follow-up Visual Analogic scale (1 is bad to 10 is perfect ) generated automatically from the subject's responses by the application's internal program 6 months
Secondary Evaluation of the evolution of the level of sleep disorders of the subject during the 6 months of follow-up Visual Analogic scale (1 is bad to 10 is perfect ) generated automatically from the subject's responses by the application's internal program. 6 months