| Literature DB >> 29843728 |
C C Moor1, M Wapenaar1, J R Miedema1, J J M Geelhoed1, P P Chandoesing1, M S Wijsenbeek2.
Abstract
In idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), home monitoring experiences are limited, not yet real-time available nor implemented in daily care. We evaluated feasibility and potential barriers of a new home monitoring program with real-time wireless home spirometry in IPF. Ten patients with IPF were asked to test this home monitoring program, including daily home spirometry, for four weeks. Measurements of home and hospital spirometry showed good agreement. All patients considered real-time wireless spirometry useful and highly feasible. Both patients and researchers suggested relatively easy solutions for the identified potential barriers regarding real-time home monitoring in IPF.Entities:
Keywords: Home monitoring; Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis; Spirometry; eHealth
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29843728 PMCID: PMC5975585 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-018-0810-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Fig. 1a Daily FVC in % predicted of one patient during two weeks. A star on top of the bar corresponds with a forced expiration > 6 s, and is intended as extra motivation for patients. b Two examples of flow volume loops including daily remarks/advices
Fig. 2Bland-Altman plot comparing hospital and home spirometry. The value for hospital FVC is the mean of the hospital-based FVC at baseline and after four weeks. The value for home spirometry is the mean of 28 home FVC readings. The solid line represents the mean difference and the dashed lines 95% limits of agreement (− 0.61 to 0.90 L).* This patient did not use the mouthpiece correctly leading to more variable and higher readings compared to hospital spirometry
A comprehensive overview of the identified potential barriers for use of the home monitoring system (wireless and real-time), experiences from the pilot study, and possible solutions as suggested by patients and staff
| Potential barriers for the use of real-time home spirometry | Findings in our pilot experiment | Possible solutions |
|---|---|---|
| No internet access | Patient who never used internet before had no problems using the tablet and perform spirometry because of the simple design. | - Provide patients with a smartphone or tablet with 4G SIM card during study to guarantee internet access |
| Quality of measurements is difficult to control | All patients performed mostly good quality flow volume loops, which could be checked real-time. | - New wireless spirometers have automated quality control and provide advice to patients |
| A handheld spirometer may be difficult to use | A few patients had to get used to handheld spirometry the first days. | - Provide a clear instruction manual and good training at start of the study. Patients should be able to perform 3 good quality measurements with ≤150 ml difference in the 2 highest FVC’s. |
| Motivation | A 6 s countdown and FVC target value is always shown during a forced expiration. This motivated patients to blow as good and long as possible. | - Do not use an FVC of 100% predicted as target value as this might demotivate patients |
| Home spirometry might induce coughing | Some patients mentioned more urge to cough compared to hospital spirometry, but one measurement a day was not a problem at all. | - Advise patients to perform spirometry after a period of rest |
| Patients might get worried seeing their own results | Anxiety and depression scores were not higher after this short pilot. Almost all patients considered it pleasant to see their daily results. | - Incorporate automated email alerts to the researchers and explain to patients that they will be contacted if FVC declines significantly |
| Daily home spirometry can be bothersome to patients | None of the patients in the pilot considered once daily spirometry bothersome, because it was not time consuming and became part of their routine. | - Advise patients to perform spirometry at almost the same time every day to create a routine |
| Compliance | Patients got motivated by keeping track of their own results and almost all patients continued home spirometry after the pilot. | - Send patients email reminders when they do not perform spirometry or report their symptoms |