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Armed with data from multiple studies about how to implement goal-setting in hemophilia, a national nonprofit organization has released a free app designed to help patients track their illness and develop and monitor their objectives.

Robust Health, available for the iPhone and Android, “can really enhance the physician-patient relationship. This is a good approach to capture the many facets of what’s important to patients and help them improve their therapy management in their lives,” Jonathan C. Roberts, MD, a hematologist/oncologist at the University of Illinois at Peoria, said in an interview.

Working with colleagues, Dr. Roberts helped the app developer, the American Thrombosis and Hemostasis Network, devise the app’s goal-setting tool. Researchers reported their findings on the tool – known as Goal Attainment Scaling for Hemophilia, or “GOAL‐Hēm” – in a series of studies that emphasized the importance of including the “patient voice.”

The tool was developed to monitor patient outcomes in terms of “meaningful change,” beyond data points such as annualized bleed rate, Dr. Roberts said.

“Metrics like this are definitely important to joint health and quality of life,” he said, but researchers hoped to expand to more outcomes that matter to patients.

Consider a pediatric patient, for example, who may set a goal of preparing his or her clotting-factor treatment and making one attempt at a puncture. The tool allows a benchmark and timetable to be set up, Dr. Roberts said, and can provide both positive reinforcement and a score that reflects how well the patient is doing. “That really can help the multidisciplinary treatment team measure improvements in the patient’s overall treatment adherence.”

For the most recent study, published in the January 2022 issue of Research and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis, researchers interviewed 19 adult patients with hemophilia (mean age 35, 68% male) and 19 caregivers of children with hemophilia (mean age of children 13, 83% male) about the language used in the tool. They responded in surveys, interviews, and focus groups.

“Thematic analysis indicated that participants were enthusiastic about patient‐centric language, empowered through the goal‐setting process, and recognized GOAL‐Hēm could measure clinically meaningful change,” the researchers reported.

They wrote that the participants kept 15 of 48 goals unchanged (32%), modified or deleted the others, and added three new goals. Their revisions included renaming one goal “bleeds,” instead of both“muscle bleeds” and “bleeds.” They renamed “work attendance” and “career planning” as simply “work.” “Depression,” “feelings of anger” and “self-esteem” were consolidated as a new heading: “emotional well-being.”

Each goal provides answers that patients can use to respond to queries about how they’re doing. For example, under the pediatric goal of “independent self-care management,” a descriptor could be “Always sets their own reminders to self‐infuse. Mother never needs to remind them.” This answer would be considered “much better than expected.”

Out of 635 responses, known as “descriptors,” most (75%) were revised or deleted in response to input from patients and caregivers. In the end, the total number of answers was reduced to 368 – 218 in the adult section, and 150 in the pediatric section.

“Our study highlights the importance of patient engagement in developing the tool and how it can be used in day-to-day practice,” Dr. Roberts said.

Going forward, he said, “we’re hoping this tool could potentially be an important player in studies of new therapeutic options for patients. The metrics could be used as kind of a common language to measure how our patients are doing on a particular therapy.”

Jayson Stoffman, MD, a pediatric hematologist/oncologist at Children’s Hospital of Winnipeg and the University of Manitoba, who was not involved in the research, welcomed the new app.

“The big challenge is always how to balance hemophilia and its management against the lifestyle needs and wants of the individual,” Dr. Stoffman said in an interview. “We don’t want people to be held back by their hemophilia, so it’s important to find the best ways to support them in their choices while optimizing their management.”

An app that helps patients define and delineate goals will be a “great benchmark to use in making treatment decisions and adjustments,” he said.

The study was funded by Takeda. Dr. Roberts disclosed grants and/or contracts from Takeda and consulting fees from Sanofi Genzyme, Takeda, Octapharma, uniQure, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Spark, and CSL Behring. The other authors reported various disclosures. Dr. Stoffman disclosed a consulting agreement with F. Hoffman La Roche AG.

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Armed with data from multiple studies about how to implement goal-setting in hemophilia, a national nonprofit organization has released a free app designed to help patients track their illness and develop and monitor their objectives.

Robust Health, available for the iPhone and Android, “can really enhance the physician-patient relationship. This is a good approach to capture the many facets of what’s important to patients and help them improve their therapy management in their lives,” Jonathan C. Roberts, MD, a hematologist/oncologist at the University of Illinois at Peoria, said in an interview.

Working with colleagues, Dr. Roberts helped the app developer, the American Thrombosis and Hemostasis Network, devise the app’s goal-setting tool. Researchers reported their findings on the tool – known as Goal Attainment Scaling for Hemophilia, or “GOAL‐Hēm” – in a series of studies that emphasized the importance of including the “patient voice.”

The tool was developed to monitor patient outcomes in terms of “meaningful change,” beyond data points such as annualized bleed rate, Dr. Roberts said.

“Metrics like this are definitely important to joint health and quality of life,” he said, but researchers hoped to expand to more outcomes that matter to patients.

Consider a pediatric patient, for example, who may set a goal of preparing his or her clotting-factor treatment and making one attempt at a puncture. The tool allows a benchmark and timetable to be set up, Dr. Roberts said, and can provide both positive reinforcement and a score that reflects how well the patient is doing. “That really can help the multidisciplinary treatment team measure improvements in the patient’s overall treatment adherence.”

For the most recent study, published in the January 2022 issue of Research and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis, researchers interviewed 19 adult patients with hemophilia (mean age 35, 68% male) and 19 caregivers of children with hemophilia (mean age of children 13, 83% male) about the language used in the tool. They responded in surveys, interviews, and focus groups.

“Thematic analysis indicated that participants were enthusiastic about patient‐centric language, empowered through the goal‐setting process, and recognized GOAL‐Hēm could measure clinically meaningful change,” the researchers reported.

They wrote that the participants kept 15 of 48 goals unchanged (32%), modified or deleted the others, and added three new goals. Their revisions included renaming one goal “bleeds,” instead of both“muscle bleeds” and “bleeds.” They renamed “work attendance” and “career planning” as simply “work.” “Depression,” “feelings of anger” and “self-esteem” were consolidated as a new heading: “emotional well-being.”

Each goal provides answers that patients can use to respond to queries about how they’re doing. For example, under the pediatric goal of “independent self-care management,” a descriptor could be “Always sets their own reminders to self‐infuse. Mother never needs to remind them.” This answer would be considered “much better than expected.”

Out of 635 responses, known as “descriptors,” most (75%) were revised or deleted in response to input from patients and caregivers. In the end, the total number of answers was reduced to 368 – 218 in the adult section, and 150 in the pediatric section.

“Our study highlights the importance of patient engagement in developing the tool and how it can be used in day-to-day practice,” Dr. Roberts said.

Going forward, he said, “we’re hoping this tool could potentially be an important player in studies of new therapeutic options for patients. The metrics could be used as kind of a common language to measure how our patients are doing on a particular therapy.”

Jayson Stoffman, MD, a pediatric hematologist/oncologist at Children’s Hospital of Winnipeg and the University of Manitoba, who was not involved in the research, welcomed the new app.

“The big challenge is always how to balance hemophilia and its management against the lifestyle needs and wants of the individual,” Dr. Stoffman said in an interview. “We don’t want people to be held back by their hemophilia, so it’s important to find the best ways to support them in their choices while optimizing their management.”

An app that helps patients define and delineate goals will be a “great benchmark to use in making treatment decisions and adjustments,” he said.

The study was funded by Takeda. Dr. Roberts disclosed grants and/or contracts from Takeda and consulting fees from Sanofi Genzyme, Takeda, Octapharma, uniQure, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Spark, and CSL Behring. The other authors reported various disclosures. Dr. Stoffman disclosed a consulting agreement with F. Hoffman La Roche AG.

Armed with data from multiple studies about how to implement goal-setting in hemophilia, a national nonprofit organization has released a free app designed to help patients track their illness and develop and monitor their objectives.

Robust Health, available for the iPhone and Android, “can really enhance the physician-patient relationship. This is a good approach to capture the many facets of what’s important to patients and help them improve their therapy management in their lives,” Jonathan C. Roberts, MD, a hematologist/oncologist at the University of Illinois at Peoria, said in an interview.

Working with colleagues, Dr. Roberts helped the app developer, the American Thrombosis and Hemostasis Network, devise the app’s goal-setting tool. Researchers reported their findings on the tool – known as Goal Attainment Scaling for Hemophilia, or “GOAL‐Hēm” – in a series of studies that emphasized the importance of including the “patient voice.”

The tool was developed to monitor patient outcomes in terms of “meaningful change,” beyond data points such as annualized bleed rate, Dr. Roberts said.

“Metrics like this are definitely important to joint health and quality of life,” he said, but researchers hoped to expand to more outcomes that matter to patients.

Consider a pediatric patient, for example, who may set a goal of preparing his or her clotting-factor treatment and making one attempt at a puncture. The tool allows a benchmark and timetable to be set up, Dr. Roberts said, and can provide both positive reinforcement and a score that reflects how well the patient is doing. “That really can help the multidisciplinary treatment team measure improvements in the patient’s overall treatment adherence.”

For the most recent study, published in the January 2022 issue of Research and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis, researchers interviewed 19 adult patients with hemophilia (mean age 35, 68% male) and 19 caregivers of children with hemophilia (mean age of children 13, 83% male) about the language used in the tool. They responded in surveys, interviews, and focus groups.

“Thematic analysis indicated that participants were enthusiastic about patient‐centric language, empowered through the goal‐setting process, and recognized GOAL‐Hēm could measure clinically meaningful change,” the researchers reported.

They wrote that the participants kept 15 of 48 goals unchanged (32%), modified or deleted the others, and added three new goals. Their revisions included renaming one goal “bleeds,” instead of both“muscle bleeds” and “bleeds.” They renamed “work attendance” and “career planning” as simply “work.” “Depression,” “feelings of anger” and “self-esteem” were consolidated as a new heading: “emotional well-being.”

Each goal provides answers that patients can use to respond to queries about how they’re doing. For example, under the pediatric goal of “independent self-care management,” a descriptor could be “Always sets their own reminders to self‐infuse. Mother never needs to remind them.” This answer would be considered “much better than expected.”

Out of 635 responses, known as “descriptors,” most (75%) were revised or deleted in response to input from patients and caregivers. In the end, the total number of answers was reduced to 368 – 218 in the adult section, and 150 in the pediatric section.

“Our study highlights the importance of patient engagement in developing the tool and how it can be used in day-to-day practice,” Dr. Roberts said.

Going forward, he said, “we’re hoping this tool could potentially be an important player in studies of new therapeutic options for patients. The metrics could be used as kind of a common language to measure how our patients are doing on a particular therapy.”

Jayson Stoffman, MD, a pediatric hematologist/oncologist at Children’s Hospital of Winnipeg and the University of Manitoba, who was not involved in the research, welcomed the new app.

“The big challenge is always how to balance hemophilia and its management against the lifestyle needs and wants of the individual,” Dr. Stoffman said in an interview. “We don’t want people to be held back by their hemophilia, so it’s important to find the best ways to support them in their choices while optimizing their management.”

An app that helps patients define and delineate goals will be a “great benchmark to use in making treatment decisions and adjustments,” he said.

The study was funded by Takeda. Dr. Roberts disclosed grants and/or contracts from Takeda and consulting fees from Sanofi Genzyme, Takeda, Octapharma, uniQure, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Spark, and CSL Behring. The other authors reported various disclosures. Dr. Stoffman disclosed a consulting agreement with F. Hoffman La Roche AG.

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