ASSIST: A Novel Remote Patient and Medication Monitoring Solution to Improve Adherence and PerSiStence With IBD Therapy

Sponsor
University of Maryland, Baltimore (Other)
Overall Status
Not yet recruiting
CT.gov ID
NCT05316584
Collaborator
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (Other), Vanderbilt University Medical Center (Other), New York University (Other), University of Cincinnati (Other), Synchronyx, LLC (Other)
123
2
29

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

The investigators hypothesize that use of a remote monitoring digital health system that supports medication taking and monitoring of symptoms will improve adherence, clinical outcomes, and decrease healthcare utilization compared to standard care in participants with inflammatory bowel disease initiating oral or subcutaneous treatment. The investigators are conducting a 12-month, multicenter, randomized, controlled trial to assess the feasibility and effectiveness of a remote monitoring digital health system on adherence, clinical outcomes, and healthcare utilization.

The investigators will address the following specific aims:
  1. Compare adherence as measured by the medication possession ratio in participants using a remote monitoring digital health system compared to standard of care.

  2. Compare clinical outcomes and healthcare utilization in participants using a remote monitoring digital health system compared to standard of care.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Behavioral: Remote monitoring
N/A

Detailed Description

The investigators hypothesize that use of a remote monitoring digital health system that supports medication taking and monitoring of symptoms will improve adherence, clinical outcomes, and decrease healthcare utilization compared to standard care in participants with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) initiating oral or subcutaneous treatment. The investigators are conducting a 12-month multicenter, randomized, controlled trial to assess the feasibility and effectiveness of a remote monitoring digital health system on adherence, clinical outcomes, and healthcare utilization.

Adult participants with IBD with regular access to a mobile device or tablet initiating therapy with an oral or subcutaneous treatment for IBD at one of the five sites will be eligible to participate. Participants will be randomized 2:1 to the intervention or standard care. Eligible participants will complete an informed consent and baseline survey gathering demographic and clinical information.

TapptTM digital health system (developed by Synchronyx) is a remote therapeutic monitoring and digital engagement solution that monitors real-time medication adherence patterns through smart label technologies, capture patient reported outcomes (PROs) and barriers to care, and process patient data through algorithms that trigger personalized digital and human touchpoints between clinical visits. The research team will input information into the system on the intervention participant's medication to be tracked, dose, and frequency of dosing. Participants in the intervention group will be shipped the smart labels to be affixed to the pill bottle, pen, or syringe of the newly prescribed medication. Prior to receiving their medication, participants will receive virtual training on how to attach and use the proprietary labels, set up their participant profile, use the participant-facing web app, and seek technical helpdesk support. At the time of a medication dose, participants will scan the label by tapping it with their mobile device to verify that they are taking the medication. Upon scanning, participants immediately will receive a notification on their device indicating that the label was successfully scanned, and that their medication adherence was updated in their profile. The app offers participants visibility into their medication adherence patterns and upcoming doses, as well as the opportunity to respond to in-app questions that capture barriers towards adherence, IBD symptoms, and patient report outcomes (PROs). This information will also be available to the research and clinical team in real-time via the provider dashboard. Most importantly, the dashboard's artificial intelligence-based algorithm will send email alerts to the clinical team if participant's adherence, symptoms, or PROs fall below predetermined thresholds. For oral medications, mean adherence <86% in a 2-week period will trigger an alert. For SC medications, an alert will be generated if a dose is 10 days late for administration. A PRO 2 score for UC or CD of 2 or more will trigger an alert. If alerts are triggered for non-adherence, a clinical nurse, pharmacist, or social worker will contact the participant to identify barriers to adherence; remediation will be initiated if possible.

The primary outcome of the proposed study will be the difference in mean medication possession ratio (MPR) between the intervention and control group during the 12-month study. Secondary outcomes will include self-reported adherence (MARS-5), clinical response and remission (Harvey Bradshaw Index for CD and partial Mayo score of UC), steroid-free response and remission, PROMIS measures of Fatigue, Sleep Disturbance, Pain Interference, Anxiety, Depression, and Quality of Life, self-efficacy (IBD Self-Efficacy Scale), new steroid use, and health care utilization (urgent care or emergency room visit, unplanned office visit, hospitalization, and/or surgery).

Assuming 2 intervention participants for every 1 control with an adherence rate among controls of 0.65 and 0.9 in intervention participations with a Type 1 error rate of 0.05 and power of 0.9, we will need to enroll 82 intervention participants and 41 controls (n=123). All analyses will be completed using intention to treat principles. For categorical variables, the groups will be compared using the Chi Square test (Fisher's Exact if not normally distributed). For continuous variables, the groups will be compared using t tests (Wilcoxon signed rank if not normally distributed). We will also build logistic and linear regression models to adjust for confounding variable for the outcomes of interest. Possible confounding variables include but are not limited to route of administration, gender, insurance type, disease type, age, concurrent psychiatric disease, smoking, and concurrent steroid and/or narcotic use.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
123 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Parallel Assignment
Intervention Model Description:
Multicenter, randomized, controlled trialMulticenter, randomized, controlled trial
Masking:
Single (Outcomes Assessor)
Masking Description:
It will not be possible to blind participants to their respective group assignment. However, to minimize bias, we will collect all outcome data electronically by study staff at the Data Management Center at the University of North Carolina masked to the group assignment.
Primary Purpose:
Health Services Research
Official Title:
A Novel Remote Patient and Medication Monitoring Solution to Improve Adherence and PerSiStence With Inflammatory Bowel DiSease Therapy-ASSIST Study
Anticipated Study Start Date :
Aug 1, 2022
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Jul 31, 2024
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Dec 31, 2024

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: Remote Monitoring

At the time of a medication dose, participants scan the smart label by tapping it with their mobile device. Participants receive a notification on their device indicating that their medication adherence was updated. Each day a medication is due, patients receive a morning reminder through SMS message notifying them on their medications schedule. If patients fail to scan the label at a given time (as expected by their specific medication regimen), they will receive an end of day text message. Participants will also complete a patient reported outcome (PRO) 2 assessment at baseline, and then monthly for the entire 12 months of the study through an HTML link sent to patients by SMS message. If nonadherence is present and/or moderate to severe symptoms, an alert will be triggered to the research team. The research team can send the PRO2 survey to patients at any given time, at their discretion, if patients are experiencing a flare or at the time of a change in medication dose.

Behavioral: Remote monitoring
See prior description of the intervention.

No Intervention: Control

The standard of care for participants in this study is modeled after the standard of care at all five study sites. Standard of care is based on current evidence-based guidelines including a comprehensive assessment, a guideline-concordant therapy plan, scheduled and as needed clinic visits, scheduled and as needed telephone calls, and administration of educational fact sheets about disease-specific topics when appropriate. Personnel used to provide standard of care at each site will vary and may include nurse coordinators, advanced practice providers, social workers, psychologists, dieticians, pharmacists, and other ancillary staff.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Medication adherence [1 year]

    Medication possession ratio

  2. Self-reported medication adherence [1 year]

    MARS-5, scores from 5 to 25 with higher scores indicated greater adherence

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Healthcare utilization [1 year]

    Rates of healthcare utilization including office and ER visits, hospitalizations, and diagnostic testing

  2. IBD Disease activity [1 year]

    Harvey Bradshaw Index ( for participants with Crohn's disease only), minimum score 0, no maximum score, higher scores indicated greater disease activity

  3. IBD Disease activity (objective) [1 year]

    C reactive protein, minimum value 0, no maximum value, higher values indicate greater disease activity

  4. Patient Reported Outcomes, Quality of Life [1 year]

    PROMIS Global Health, T scores from 0-100, 50 is the population mean, higher scores indicate better quality of life

  5. Self-efficacy [1 year]

    IBD Self-efficacy scale, scores range from 29-290 with higher scores indicated greater self-efficacy

  6. IBD Disease Activity [1 year]

    Simple clinical colitis activity index (participants with ulcerative colitis only), minimum score 0, maximum score 19, higher scores indicate greater disease activity

  7. IBD Disease Activity (objective) [1 year]

    Fecal calprotectin, minimum value 0, no maximum value, higher values indicate greater disease activity

  8. IBD Disease Activity (objective) [1 year]

    Mayo Endoscopic score (participants with ulcerative colitis only), minimum score 0, maximum score 3, higher scores indicate greater disease activity

  9. IBD Disease Activity (objective) [1 year]

    Simple endoscopic score (participants with Crohn's disease only), minimum score 0, maximum score 60, higher scores indicate greater disease activity

  10. Patient Reported Outcome (Pain interference) [1 year]

    PROMIS Pain Interference, T scores from 0-100, 50 is the population mean, higher scores indicate more pain

  11. Patient Reported Outcome (Anxiety) [1 Year]

    PROMIS Anxiety, T scores from 0-100, 50 is the population mean, higher scores indicate more anxiety

  12. Patient Reported Outcome (Depression) [1 year]

    PROMIS Depression, T scores from 0-100, 50 is the population mean, higher scores indicate more depression

  13. Patient Reported Outcome (Fatigue) [1 year]

    PROMIS Fatigue, T scores from 0-100, 50 is the population mean, higher scores indicate more fatigue

  14. Patient Reported Outcome (Sleep Disturbance) [1 year]

    PROMIS Sleep Disturbance, T scores from 0-100, 50 is the population mean, higher scores indicate more sleep disturbance

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years to 80 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No
Inclusion Criteria:
  1. At least 18 years of age or older

  2. Have documented IBD based on usual diagnostic criteria including clinical symptoms and findings from endoscopy, radiology studies, and histology

  3. Initiating treatment with a new oral or subcutaneous treatment for IBD

  4. Have access to a mobile smartphone (iPhone 7 or later; Android release date 2012 or later) with reliable data and/or Wi-Fi access

  5. Ability to understand the protocol and provide informed consent in English

Exclusion Criteria:
  1. Inability to speak and read English

  2. Inability to comply with the study protocol

  3. Presence of an ileostomy, colostomy, ileoanal pouch anastomosis, or ileorectal anastomosis

  4. Patients initiating oral corticosteroids only (without concurrent use of an oral or subcutaneous maintenance therapy)

  5. Imminent surgery (within the next 60 days)

  6. History of short bowel syndrome

  7. Uncontrolled medical or psychiatric disease at the opinion of the investigator

  8. Degenerative neurologic condition

  9. Unstable angina

  10. Symptomatic peripheral vascular disease

  11. Malignancy within the last 2 years (excluding squamous or basal cell cancers of the skin)

  12. Poorly controlled depression, mania, and schizophrenia

  13. Serious active infection requiring antimicrobial therapy (excluding CD patients with perianal CD on antibiotics)

Contacts and Locations

Locations

No locations specified.

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • University of Maryland, Baltimore
  • University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
  • Vanderbilt University Medical Center
  • New York University
  • University of Cincinnati
  • Synchronyx, LLC

Investigators

None specified.

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
Raymond Cross, Professor of Medicine, University of Maryland, Baltimore
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT05316584
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • 22010339
First Posted:
Apr 7, 2022
Last Update Posted:
Jun 21, 2022
Last Verified:
Jun 1, 2022
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
Yes
Plan to Share IPD:
Yes
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by Raymond Cross, Professor of Medicine, University of Maryland, Baltimore
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Jun 21, 2022