The Box 2.0: Using Smart Technology for Early Diagnosis of Complications After Cardiovascular Surgery
NCT ID: NCT03690492
Last Updated: 2021-09-08
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
730 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2018-10-02
2021-06-15
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Recent publications implicate that home monitoring with such consumer devices might improve quality of care. A study by Bosworth et al. in patients with hypertension showed that increased monitoring and subsequent treatment led to a better controlled blood pressure in patients who were treated for hypertension. Another study, which is currently being carried out at the LUMC, is investigating whether patients benefit from a smart technology intervention after they had a myocardial infarction. Preliminary (unpublished) results show that clinical outcomes are similar, with higher patient satisfaction. Cost analyses show that there is a cost reduction per patient with smart technology follow-up. Therefore, smart technology could be a useful tool to improve patient monitoring and therefore patient safety.
Patients who are discharged after they underwent cardiovascular surgery are at risk to develop one or more of three most seen late complications: sternal wound infection, cardiac decompensation or rhythm disturbances such as atrial fibrillation. This is not always detected before those patients are discharged.
Currently, patients who underwent cardiovascular surgery return to the outpatient clinic 14 days and three months after discharge. They are seen by a specialist nurse or cardiologist, who will perform a general check-up and inspect the sternal wound. An echocardiogram will be performed before the three-month visit. If there is suspicion for a rhythm disturbance on the outpatient clinic visit, the cardiologist might decide to perform Holter monitoring during 24 hours. As this is a small window of time, not all rhythm disturbances will be diagnosed. Smart technology is hypothesized to increase the chances of diagnosing rhythm disturbances. In the case of sternal wound infection and cardiac decompensation, smart technology may show a declining trend before a patient visits the outpatient clinic, which can lead to early detection and treatment.
A small pilot study by McElroy et all found that after cardiovascular surgery, both the patient as well as the health care team are highly satisfied with added smart technology, due to the ease of use of the technology and platform. There was a main focus on readmission rates, which did not differ between the groups. However the trend shows an increase in diagnosing atrial fibrillation (15,4 vs 29,6%), sternal wound infection or cardiac decompensation were not studied.
To our knowledge, no other study has yet looked into diagnosing late complications after cardiovascular surgery with the help of smart technology. It is hypothesized that smart technology could help diagnose the main three diagnoses mentioned above early on and with that, improve quality of care in patients after cardiovascular surgery. Therefore, in this study, the clinical effectiveness of a smart technology intervention is investigated in patients who have underwent cardiovascular surgery at the department of Thoracic Surgery at Leiden University Medical Center.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NON_RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
DIAGNOSTIC
NONE
Study Groups
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The Box 2.0
Patients will be given a Box, in which they will find a thermometer, blood pressure monitor, activity tracker, weight scale, blood oxygen saturation monitor, a single lead ECG device and a four lead ECG device. Also, they will be followed-up by use of two webcam consultations instead of a normal outpatient clinic visit.
The Box 2.0
Patients in the intervention arm will receive a Box with several devices that is hypothesized to allow for better and earlier detection of complications after cardiac surgery.
Controls
Patients will not receive a Box. They will be followed up by standard care, returning to the outpatient clinic at the same frequency and timing as The Box 2.0 arm.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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The Box 2.0
Patients in the intervention arm will receive a Box with several devices that is hypothesized to allow for better and earlier detection of complications after cardiac surgery.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Patient is able to communicate in English or Dutch
* Patient has been referred by a cardiologist from the Leiden University Medical Center, Cardiological Center Voorschoten, Alrijne Hospital or Haaglanden Medical Center
Exclusion Criteria
* Patient is pregnant
* Patient is considered an incapacitated adult
* Patient is unwilling to sign the informed consent form
* Patient undergoes emergency thoracic surgery (INTERMACS 1 or 2)
* Patient has active endocarditis at the time of operation
* Patient is on mechanical circulatory support before operation
* Patient has a ventricular septal rupture
* Patient undergoes extracorporeal membrane oxygenation or ventricular assist device insertion
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Leiden University Medical Center
OTHER
Responsible Party
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RoderickTreskes
Principal Investigator
Locations
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Leiden University Medical Centre
Leiden, South Holland, Netherlands
Countries
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References
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Biersteker TE, Boogers MJ, de Lind van Wijngaarden RA, Groenwold RH, Trines SA, van Alem AP, Kirchhof CJ, van Hof N, Klautz RJ, Schalij MJ, Treskes RW. Use of Smart Technology for the Early Diagnosis of Complications After Cardiac Surgery: The Box 2.0 Study Protocol. JMIR Res Protoc. 2020 Apr 21;9(4):e16326. doi: 10.2196/16326.
Other Identifiers
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NL65959.058.18
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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