| Literature DB >> 30090035 |
Abstract
Electronic health (eHealth) data collection is increasingly used in many chronic illnesses, to track pattern of disease. eHealth systems have the potential to revolutionize care. Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a paradigm for such an approach: this is a chronic disease that usually affects young and technologically literate patient population, who are motivated to be involved in their own care. A range of eHealth technologies are available for IBD. This review considers the strengths and weaknesses of 7 platforms that focus on patient-provider interaction. These have been developed in Denmark, United States, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom, demonstrating an international interest in this form of technology and interaction. Not only do these technologies aim to improve care but they also have the potential to collect large amounts of information. Information includes demographics and patient reported outcomes (symptoms, quality of life), quality of care (steroid use, among other metrics) and outcomes such as hospitalization. These data could inform quality improvement programmes to improve their focus. eHealth technology is also open to machine learning to analyze large data sets, through which personalized algorithms may be developed.Entities:
Keywords: Electronic health records; Inflammatory bowel disease; Mobile applications
Year: 2018 PMID: 30090035 PMCID: PMC6077306 DOI: 10.5217/ir.2018.16.3.366
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intest Res ISSN: 1598-9100
Overview of eHealth Tools for IBD that Incorporate Patient-Provider Interaction
| Author (year) | Country | Intervention | IBD type (treatment) | Study design | No. of patients using eHealth tool | Control | eHealth assessments | Frequency of eHealth measurements |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elkjaer et al. (2010) | Denmark and Ireland | Constant-Care | Mild-moderate UC (5-ASA) | RCT | 169 | 164 | Disease activity: SCCAI QoL: SIBDQ | Remission: monthly Relapse (SCCAI> 5): daily |
| Pedersen et al. (2012) | Denmark | Constant-Care for infliximab, to determine interval between infusions | CD (infliximab) | Cohort study | 27 | NA | Disease activity: HBI | Weekly |
| Pedersen et al. (2014) | Denmark | Constant-Care for 5-ASA, to guide therapy | Mild-moderate UC (5-ASA) | Cohort study | 95 | NA | Disease activity: SCCAI | Weekly |
| Cross et al. (2012) | USA | UC HAT (home telemanagement system) | UC (any treatment) | RCT | 25 | 22 | Disease activity: UC symptom diary (15 questions) | Weekly |
| Cross et al. (2015) | USA | Telemedicine using mobile phone texts to communicate with patients | UC or CD (any treatment) | RCT currently in progress | 250 Planned | 125 Planned | Disease activity: HBI for CD SCCAI for UC | Weekly or fortnightly Weekly |
| Atreja et al. (2017) | USA | HealthPROMISE | UC or CD (any treatment) | RCT currently in progress | 150 Planned (320 in total) | 150 Planned | QoL: SIBDQ | Fortnightly |
| de Jong et al. (2017) | The Netherlands | myIBDcoach | UC or CD (any treatment) | RCT | 465 | 444 | Disease activity: Monitor IBD at home questionnaire Multiple additional monthly modules: e.g., adherence, personal care plan, outpatient visit preparation | Monthly to 3 monthly |
| Walsh (2017) | UK | TrueColours UC (web-based system with email prompts, accessible by any device) | UC (any treatment) | Pilot study | 66 | NA | Disease activity: SCCAI QoL: IBD Control-8, EQ-5D, CUCQ8 Outcomes: ICHOM (e.g., steroid use, hospitalisation, emergency department visits) | Daily Fortnightly 3-monthly |
eHealth, electronic health; 5-ASA, 5-aminosalicylic acid; SCCAI, Simple Clinical Colitis Activity Index; QoL, quality of life; SIBDQ, Short Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire; HBI, Harvey Bradshaw Index; UC HAT, UC Home Automated Tele-management; ICHOM, International Consortium of Health Outcomes Measurement.