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Remote Monitoring of Patients With an Inflammatory Bowel Disease Under no or Maintenance Therapy
Sponsor: Universitaire Ziekenhuizen KU Leuven
Summary
Routine follow-up of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) under stable doses of maintenance therapy or no IBD-related therapy at all, consists of intensive monitoring with prescheduled outpatient visits every six or twelve months. However, many of these patients do not require additional interventions from the IBD specialist during these visits. In addition, patients in long-term remission, often request a less frequent follow-up in the hospital and in consequence a less frequent absence from school or work. In conclusion, these routinely follow-up visits might put unnecessary burden on both healthcare providers and IBD patients, as well as on healthcare resources. Until now, no clear standard was set for how to organize a remote monitoring programme that is feasible and safe in a large patient population. Despite the possible added value of remote monitoring for IBD patients on stable or no therapy and who are in remission, they are seldomly the targeted population in clinical trials analysing the effects of remote monitoring in IBD. Secondly, a significant reduction in outpatient clinic visits, is often not actively included in the programme, but more an outcome result. Finally, to compose a safe remote monitoring programme, subjective and objective parameters of disease activity should be collected. With the ROADMAP study, the main objective is to evaluate the safety and feasibility of remote monitoring in IBD patients that are stable on their current therapy or receive no IBD-related therapy. Secondly, a health economic evaluation will be conducted. Patients will be randomised to either the remote monitoring group or control group. The remote monitoring group will visit the outpatient clinic after two years. During this two-year period, patients will be monitored remotely via three-monthly questionnaires (PRO-2, IBD disk, WPAI, EQ-5D-5L) and faecal calprotectin measures. An IBD nurse will evaluate all incoming data and act in case of red flags.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 80 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
456
Start Date
2025-02-01
Completion Date
2027-03-30
Last Updated
2024-12-11
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Remote monitoring
The intervention group will enroll in the remote monitoring programme. In the standard of care patients visit the outpatient clinic every six months. Patients in the control group will remain in the six-monthly follow-up programma, whereas patients in the intervention group will only visit the outpatient clinic two-yearly. The latter group will be monitored remotely via questionnaires, calprotectin analysis (using CalproSmart) and blood analyses. An IBD nurse will evaluate all incomming data and undertake action if necessary.