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– Researchers in the United Kingdom are looking at how smartphone technology can help to improve how patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) monitor their disease at home and between clinic visits.

As part of the Remote Monitoring of Rheumatoid Arthritis (REMORA) study, a team led by Will Dixon, MD, at the University of Manchester (England), has developed an app that links directly into electronic patient records to help collect information from patients between their regular clinic visits for both self-monitoring and research purposes.

“REMORA is motivated by the need to learn about what happens to patients in between clinic visits, and that’s both for clinical care and for research but also to have the opportunity to support self-management, so we’ve designed the study to meet those three needs,” Dr. Dixon, professor and chair of digital epidemiology in Manchester University’s division of musculoskeletal and dermatological sciences, said in an interview at the British Society for Rheumatology annual conference.

Dr. Will Dixon
There were three phases to the REMORA project, the first being qualitative research to understand which outcome measures should be included in the app. To find out, the team worked with clinicians, researchers, and patients with RA to determine which patient-reported outcomes should be included. The second phase involved the development of a beta-version of the app, again with patients giving their feedback on how it should be designed. The third and final phase tested the app in a real-life setting to see how data collected compared with that recalled during clinic visits and how it linked into patients’ individual medical records.

Dr. Dixon explained that when patients are seen every few months they might forget or underplay events that could have significance for their clinical care. Use of the beta version of the app between clinic consultations in the study proved there was recall error.

“In the consultation, we’d ask people how they’d been doing before looking at the graphs in the app, and even people who had said they’d been absolutely fine since they’d last been seen, even in the previous month of beta-testing, have signs that they could have been [having] pain flares,” Dr. Dixon said. This sort of prospective data collection by the app could enable discussion of any irregularities even if more stoic patients reported having no problems.

Sara Freeman/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Lynn Austin
During an abstract presentation at the meeting, Lynn Austin, PhD, of the Center for Primary Care at the University of Manchester, talked about the specific electronic patient-reported outcomes (ePROs) that ended up in the beta version of the app. The various stakeholders were asked not only what ePROs to record, but also when these should be recorded and how they should be recorded, such as by rating on a numeric scale or by free text entry.

The responses showed that there were some similarities in the information that clinicians and researchers and patients want to record, but also some key differences.

All groups wanted the app to be able to collect information about possible changes in disease activity (indicated by levels of pain, joint swelling, or disease flares) and the impact that these had on physical and emotional well-being.

Patients were open to regular monitoring, if not too burdensome, but would prefer to note things down “when something happened.” On the other hand, clinicians and researchers wanted regularity and consistency in the monitoring, although they saw the benefit of a more “ad hoc” approach.

Clinicians and researchers felt no need to “reinvent the wheel” and indicated that existing validated tools could be used to collect the information. Conversely, patients preferred a more pictorial or free-text approach, although were aware of some standardized tools in common use.

Daily, weekly, and monthly question sets were developed, with a diary that uses emojis to indicate how people using the app are feeling and a free-text area to allow them to note down any significant health events or thoughts.

Pilot testing of the app has been done in one hospital so far, but it was so well received that patients did not want to have to stop using it at the end of the study, Dr. Austin said in an interview.

Linking into the patient records is a unique approach, and if it proves successful in RA, it could be rolled out across the country’s National Health Service (NHS) and perhaps even into other chronic conditions where self-monitoring is needed.

“We all know we have a limited time in our consultations, so we need to develop a system whereby a clinician, in the 15 minutes they have got for a follow-up appointment, can set somebody up with an ‘app prescription,’ ” Dr. Dixon said. “We’re looking to really develop a blueprint for how apps can successfully connect into the NHS,” Dr. Dixon said. At present, however, the next step is to try to scale up the app for use in several hospitals within an area rather than roll it out nationally, he said.
 

 

 

Using built-in accelerometer for research

Another approach to harnessing smartphone technology is being taken by researchers at the University of Southampton (England), where engineering postgraduate student Jimmy Caroupapoulle and his collaborators are working on an app that continually uses the built-in sensors in a phone to detect movements, and thus how physically active someone is.

“What we are trying to achieve is to develop an application that can just run in the background so people do not have to do too much,” Mr. Caroupapoulle explained in an interview around his poster presentation.

Using the app, called RApp, patients will be able to answer daily questions based on existing tools (RAPID3 and MDHAQ) to record their levels of pain, joint inflammation, and physical activity. The latter would be recorded via the phone’s onboard accelerometer to give a more objective view of whether the patient is moving around, as well as the patient’s speed in getting up from a seated position. The app collects data using the 28-joint Disease Activity Score so an indication of the severity of joint pain or inflammation can be assessed.

The aim is to give the patients the power to monitor themselves but also to facilitate discussion with their physicians. Data from the app will be integrated into an online portal so that patients and their doctors can see the information provided.

So far, 5 patients with RA have tested the application and the next stage is to release the application to a wider group, perhaps 20 patients, Mr. Caroupapoulle said.

“There are lots of apps out there, but this is something that looks at the quality of movement.” consultant rheumatologist Christopher Edwards, MD, a member of the team behind the RApp, said in an interview.

As opposed to pedometers or other devices that monitor physical activity to varying degrees of accuracy, RApp looks at how people accelerate as they stand up or move, which can be important for those with arthritis, and how that relates to their disease activity, said Dr. Edwards, professor of rheumatology at the University of Southampton.

“You can’t guarantee that someone always had their phone in their hand or in their bag,” Dr. Edwards said, “so what you want to do is get a sample from time during the day that gives you an overall representation, even if that is a very short period, just once during the day, then we’ll see if that makes a difference over time and whether that correlates with someone’s disease activity.”

The REMORA study is sponsored by Arthritis Research UK and the National Institute of Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care Greater Manchester. RApp is being developed without commercial funding. Dr. Austin, Dr. Dixon, Mr. Caroupapoulle, and Dr. Edwards stated they had no conflicts of interest.

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– Researchers in the United Kingdom are looking at how smartphone technology can help to improve how patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) monitor their disease at home and between clinic visits.

As part of the Remote Monitoring of Rheumatoid Arthritis (REMORA) study, a team led by Will Dixon, MD, at the University of Manchester (England), has developed an app that links directly into electronic patient records to help collect information from patients between their regular clinic visits for both self-monitoring and research purposes.

“REMORA is motivated by the need to learn about what happens to patients in between clinic visits, and that’s both for clinical care and for research but also to have the opportunity to support self-management, so we’ve designed the study to meet those three needs,” Dr. Dixon, professor and chair of digital epidemiology in Manchester University’s division of musculoskeletal and dermatological sciences, said in an interview at the British Society for Rheumatology annual conference.

Dr. Will Dixon
There were three phases to the REMORA project, the first being qualitative research to understand which outcome measures should be included in the app. To find out, the team worked with clinicians, researchers, and patients with RA to determine which patient-reported outcomes should be included. The second phase involved the development of a beta-version of the app, again with patients giving their feedback on how it should be designed. The third and final phase tested the app in a real-life setting to see how data collected compared with that recalled during clinic visits and how it linked into patients’ individual medical records.

Dr. Dixon explained that when patients are seen every few months they might forget or underplay events that could have significance for their clinical care. Use of the beta version of the app between clinic consultations in the study proved there was recall error.

“In the consultation, we’d ask people how they’d been doing before looking at the graphs in the app, and even people who had said they’d been absolutely fine since they’d last been seen, even in the previous month of beta-testing, have signs that they could have been [having] pain flares,” Dr. Dixon said. This sort of prospective data collection by the app could enable discussion of any irregularities even if more stoic patients reported having no problems.

Sara Freeman/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Lynn Austin
During an abstract presentation at the meeting, Lynn Austin, PhD, of the Center for Primary Care at the University of Manchester, talked about the specific electronic patient-reported outcomes (ePROs) that ended up in the beta version of the app. The various stakeholders were asked not only what ePROs to record, but also when these should be recorded and how they should be recorded, such as by rating on a numeric scale or by free text entry.

The responses showed that there were some similarities in the information that clinicians and researchers and patients want to record, but also some key differences.

All groups wanted the app to be able to collect information about possible changes in disease activity (indicated by levels of pain, joint swelling, or disease flares) and the impact that these had on physical and emotional well-being.

Patients were open to regular monitoring, if not too burdensome, but would prefer to note things down “when something happened.” On the other hand, clinicians and researchers wanted regularity and consistency in the monitoring, although they saw the benefit of a more “ad hoc” approach.

Clinicians and researchers felt no need to “reinvent the wheel” and indicated that existing validated tools could be used to collect the information. Conversely, patients preferred a more pictorial or free-text approach, although were aware of some standardized tools in common use.

Daily, weekly, and monthly question sets were developed, with a diary that uses emojis to indicate how people using the app are feeling and a free-text area to allow them to note down any significant health events or thoughts.

Pilot testing of the app has been done in one hospital so far, but it was so well received that patients did not want to have to stop using it at the end of the study, Dr. Austin said in an interview.

Linking into the patient records is a unique approach, and if it proves successful in RA, it could be rolled out across the country’s National Health Service (NHS) and perhaps even into other chronic conditions where self-monitoring is needed.

“We all know we have a limited time in our consultations, so we need to develop a system whereby a clinician, in the 15 minutes they have got for a follow-up appointment, can set somebody up with an ‘app prescription,’ ” Dr. Dixon said. “We’re looking to really develop a blueprint for how apps can successfully connect into the NHS,” Dr. Dixon said. At present, however, the next step is to try to scale up the app for use in several hospitals within an area rather than roll it out nationally, he said.
 

 

 

Using built-in accelerometer for research

Another approach to harnessing smartphone technology is being taken by researchers at the University of Southampton (England), where engineering postgraduate student Jimmy Caroupapoulle and his collaborators are working on an app that continually uses the built-in sensors in a phone to detect movements, and thus how physically active someone is.

“What we are trying to achieve is to develop an application that can just run in the background so people do not have to do too much,” Mr. Caroupapoulle explained in an interview around his poster presentation.

Using the app, called RApp, patients will be able to answer daily questions based on existing tools (RAPID3 and MDHAQ) to record their levels of pain, joint inflammation, and physical activity. The latter would be recorded via the phone’s onboard accelerometer to give a more objective view of whether the patient is moving around, as well as the patient’s speed in getting up from a seated position. The app collects data using the 28-joint Disease Activity Score so an indication of the severity of joint pain or inflammation can be assessed.

The aim is to give the patients the power to monitor themselves but also to facilitate discussion with their physicians. Data from the app will be integrated into an online portal so that patients and their doctors can see the information provided.

So far, 5 patients with RA have tested the application and the next stage is to release the application to a wider group, perhaps 20 patients, Mr. Caroupapoulle said.

“There are lots of apps out there, but this is something that looks at the quality of movement.” consultant rheumatologist Christopher Edwards, MD, a member of the team behind the RApp, said in an interview.

As opposed to pedometers or other devices that monitor physical activity to varying degrees of accuracy, RApp looks at how people accelerate as they stand up or move, which can be important for those with arthritis, and how that relates to their disease activity, said Dr. Edwards, professor of rheumatology at the University of Southampton.

“You can’t guarantee that someone always had their phone in their hand or in their bag,” Dr. Edwards said, “so what you want to do is get a sample from time during the day that gives you an overall representation, even if that is a very short period, just once during the day, then we’ll see if that makes a difference over time and whether that correlates with someone’s disease activity.”

The REMORA study is sponsored by Arthritis Research UK and the National Institute of Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care Greater Manchester. RApp is being developed without commercial funding. Dr. Austin, Dr. Dixon, Mr. Caroupapoulle, and Dr. Edwards stated they had no conflicts of interest.

 

– Researchers in the United Kingdom are looking at how smartphone technology can help to improve how patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) monitor their disease at home and between clinic visits.

As part of the Remote Monitoring of Rheumatoid Arthritis (REMORA) study, a team led by Will Dixon, MD, at the University of Manchester (England), has developed an app that links directly into electronic patient records to help collect information from patients between their regular clinic visits for both self-monitoring and research purposes.

“REMORA is motivated by the need to learn about what happens to patients in between clinic visits, and that’s both for clinical care and for research but also to have the opportunity to support self-management, so we’ve designed the study to meet those three needs,” Dr. Dixon, professor and chair of digital epidemiology in Manchester University’s division of musculoskeletal and dermatological sciences, said in an interview at the British Society for Rheumatology annual conference.

Dr. Will Dixon
There were three phases to the REMORA project, the first being qualitative research to understand which outcome measures should be included in the app. To find out, the team worked with clinicians, researchers, and patients with RA to determine which patient-reported outcomes should be included. The second phase involved the development of a beta-version of the app, again with patients giving their feedback on how it should be designed. The third and final phase tested the app in a real-life setting to see how data collected compared with that recalled during clinic visits and how it linked into patients’ individual medical records.

Dr. Dixon explained that when patients are seen every few months they might forget or underplay events that could have significance for their clinical care. Use of the beta version of the app between clinic consultations in the study proved there was recall error.

“In the consultation, we’d ask people how they’d been doing before looking at the graphs in the app, and even people who had said they’d been absolutely fine since they’d last been seen, even in the previous month of beta-testing, have signs that they could have been [having] pain flares,” Dr. Dixon said. This sort of prospective data collection by the app could enable discussion of any irregularities even if more stoic patients reported having no problems.

Sara Freeman/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Lynn Austin
During an abstract presentation at the meeting, Lynn Austin, PhD, of the Center for Primary Care at the University of Manchester, talked about the specific electronic patient-reported outcomes (ePROs) that ended up in the beta version of the app. The various stakeholders were asked not only what ePROs to record, but also when these should be recorded and how they should be recorded, such as by rating on a numeric scale or by free text entry.

The responses showed that there were some similarities in the information that clinicians and researchers and patients want to record, but also some key differences.

All groups wanted the app to be able to collect information about possible changes in disease activity (indicated by levels of pain, joint swelling, or disease flares) and the impact that these had on physical and emotional well-being.

Patients were open to regular monitoring, if not too burdensome, but would prefer to note things down “when something happened.” On the other hand, clinicians and researchers wanted regularity and consistency in the monitoring, although they saw the benefit of a more “ad hoc” approach.

Clinicians and researchers felt no need to “reinvent the wheel” and indicated that existing validated tools could be used to collect the information. Conversely, patients preferred a more pictorial or free-text approach, although were aware of some standardized tools in common use.

Daily, weekly, and monthly question sets were developed, with a diary that uses emojis to indicate how people using the app are feeling and a free-text area to allow them to note down any significant health events or thoughts.

Pilot testing of the app has been done in one hospital so far, but it was so well received that patients did not want to have to stop using it at the end of the study, Dr. Austin said in an interview.

Linking into the patient records is a unique approach, and if it proves successful in RA, it could be rolled out across the country’s National Health Service (NHS) and perhaps even into other chronic conditions where self-monitoring is needed.

“We all know we have a limited time in our consultations, so we need to develop a system whereby a clinician, in the 15 minutes they have got for a follow-up appointment, can set somebody up with an ‘app prescription,’ ” Dr. Dixon said. “We’re looking to really develop a blueprint for how apps can successfully connect into the NHS,” Dr. Dixon said. At present, however, the next step is to try to scale up the app for use in several hospitals within an area rather than roll it out nationally, he said.
 

 

 

Using built-in accelerometer for research

Another approach to harnessing smartphone technology is being taken by researchers at the University of Southampton (England), where engineering postgraduate student Jimmy Caroupapoulle and his collaborators are working on an app that continually uses the built-in sensors in a phone to detect movements, and thus how physically active someone is.

“What we are trying to achieve is to develop an application that can just run in the background so people do not have to do too much,” Mr. Caroupapoulle explained in an interview around his poster presentation.

Using the app, called RApp, patients will be able to answer daily questions based on existing tools (RAPID3 and MDHAQ) to record their levels of pain, joint inflammation, and physical activity. The latter would be recorded via the phone’s onboard accelerometer to give a more objective view of whether the patient is moving around, as well as the patient’s speed in getting up from a seated position. The app collects data using the 28-joint Disease Activity Score so an indication of the severity of joint pain or inflammation can be assessed.

The aim is to give the patients the power to monitor themselves but also to facilitate discussion with their physicians. Data from the app will be integrated into an online portal so that patients and their doctors can see the information provided.

So far, 5 patients with RA have tested the application and the next stage is to release the application to a wider group, perhaps 20 patients, Mr. Caroupapoulle said.

“There are lots of apps out there, but this is something that looks at the quality of movement.” consultant rheumatologist Christopher Edwards, MD, a member of the team behind the RApp, said in an interview.

As opposed to pedometers or other devices that monitor physical activity to varying degrees of accuracy, RApp looks at how people accelerate as they stand up or move, which can be important for those with arthritis, and how that relates to their disease activity, said Dr. Edwards, professor of rheumatology at the University of Southampton.

“You can’t guarantee that someone always had their phone in their hand or in their bag,” Dr. Edwards said, “so what you want to do is get a sample from time during the day that gives you an overall representation, even if that is a very short period, just once during the day, then we’ll see if that makes a difference over time and whether that correlates with someone’s disease activity.”

The REMORA study is sponsored by Arthritis Research UK and the National Institute of Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care Greater Manchester. RApp is being developed without commercial funding. Dr. Austin, Dr. Dixon, Mr. Caroupapoulle, and Dr. Edwards stated they had no conflicts of interest.

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