| Literature DB >> 33849855 |
Marcel Meyerheim1, Christina Karamanidou2, Sheila Payne3, Tina Garani-Papadatos4, Annette Sander5, Julia Downing6, Kostas Stamatopoulos2, J Ling7, Cathy Payne7, Lydia Scarfò8, Petr Lokaj9, Christos Maramis2, Norbert Graf10.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Electronic patient-reported outcomes (ePROs) have tremendous potential to optimise palliative and supportive care for children with cancer, their families and healthcare providers. Particularly, these children and their families are subjected to multiple strains caused by the disease and its treatment. The MyPal digital health platform is designed to address these complex demands by offering pursuant ePRO-based functionalities via two mobile applications, one developed for children and the other for their parents. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: In this observational prospective feasibility study, 100 paediatric oncology patients aged between 6 and 17 years and at least one of their parents/legal guardians will be recruited at three clinical sites in two European countries (Germany and Czech Republic). They will use the mobile applications which are part of the novel digital health platform. During a 6-month study period, participants will complete various ePROs via the applications addressing quality of life, satisfaction with care and impact of the disease on the family at monthly intervals. Additionally, priority-based symptom reporting is integrated into a serious game for children. Outcomes that will be assessed concern the feasibility and the evaluation of the newly designed digital health platform to contribute to the evidence base of clinical ePRO use in paediatric oncology and palliative care process. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The MyPal-Child study obtained ethical approval from the Ethics Committee responsible for the University of Saarland, that is, the Ärztekammer des Saarlandes, the Ethics Committee of the Medical School Hannover and the Ethics Committee of the University of Brno. Study results will be disseminated through scientific publications, presentations at international conferences, congresses and a final report to the European Commission. General publicly accessible information can be found on the project website (www.mypal-project.eu) and social media. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBERS: U1111-1251-0043, DRKS00021458, NCT04381221. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: health informatics; paediatric oncology; paediatric palliative care
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33849855 PMCID: PMC8051393 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-045226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Patient-specific study enrolment schema of MyPal4Kids. ePROS, electronic patient-reported outcomes.
The primary and secondary users of the MyPal digital health platform
| User type | Description |
| Children with cancer | The child cancer patients registered at the participating clinical centres (primary users) |
| Parents of children with cancer | The parents or legal guardians of the primary users (secondary users) |
| Healthcare professionals | The interdisciplinary team of treating clinicians (oncologists, haematologists) nurses, psychologists, social workers, other palliative care members) of participating clinical centres (secondary users) |
Figure 2Software and hardware modules of the MyPal digital health platform. The MyPal Child and carer APP are useable via various types of mobile devices. The user of the MyPal carer APP are the parents/legal guardians involved in the study. Healthcare professionals can use the MyPal carer APP as well to report as proxy for the child.
Figure 3(A) A screenshot of the gamified symptom questionnaire as part of the MyPal Child app. (B) Screenshots taken of the MyPal carer APP depicting the PATSAT C-33 questionnaire with instruction screen, selection of patient setting screen and one sample question screen.
The functionalities of the MyPal Child app offered to the child patients
| Functionality | Description | |
| P1 | Game playing | This is a prominent functionality of the MyPal gamified app. The patient is offered to play three new run sessions in a day, during which he/she controls a diver swimming in an underwater world. The patient can also customise various elements of the game (eg, the appearance of the diver) at any time. |
| P2 | In-game symptom reporting | This is the main ePRO data collection functionality of the MyPal gamified tablet app. During each gaming session, the game pauses five times for the user to answer a single symptom-related question (see |
| P3 | Spontaneous symptom reporting | This is the secondary functionality that allows patients to report physical symptoms whenever they wish. An electronic implementation of the SSPedi/Mini SSPedi questionnaire outside the game is employed for the spontaneous reporting. |
| P4 | Periodic QoL reporting | This is the secondary functionality that asks patients to report their QoL once per month. An electronic implementation of the validated PedsQL questionnaire is, therefore, employed. |
The functionalities of the MyPal Carer app offered to the child’s parents
| Functionality | Description | |
| R1 | Patient QoL reporting | Proxy reporting of the QoL for the patient using an electronic implementation of the validated PedsQL questionnaire. Older patients will be asked to complete the questionnaire directly in the MyPal Child app. This is linked with an outcome measure of the study and is reported once per month. |
| R2 | Parent QoL reporting | Reporting of the QoL of the parent using an electronic implementation of the validated EQ-5D-3L questionnaire. This is linked with an outcome measure of the study and is reported once per month. |
| R3 | Satisfaction with care reporting | Reporting of the satisfaction with received care using an electronic implementation of the validated PATSAT-C33 questionnaire. This is linked with an outcome measure of the study and is reported once per month. |
| R4 | Disease impact on family scale reporting | Reporting of the impact of the disease on the family using an electronic implementation of the validated Impact on Family Scale questionnaire. This is linked with an outcome measure of the study and is reported once per month. |
| R5 | Patient Symptom Reporting | Proxy reporting of symptoms for the patient using an electronic adaption of the SSPedi/Mini-SSPedi questionnaire. Usually patients will be asked to answer questions with regard to symptoms directly in the gamified app. |
QoL, quality of life.
The functionalities of the MyPal web-based app offered to the HCPs
| Functionality | Description | |
| H1 | Incoming information summary | A central page of the web-based app displays in a summarised form the incoming patient information that has not been reviewed yet. Incoming information is automatically prioritised in the system using custom algorithms whereby pieces of incoming information are assigned the highest priority and placed at the top of the list. Whenever an item is reviewed in full, it is removed from the list. |
| H2 | Individual data dashboard | A page that presents all the information collected for a given patient since the start of their participation in the study, using a dashboard with modern visualisations (see |
| H3 | Symptom Status over Time | This functionality and its visualisation are linked to the individual data dashboard. HCPs can document interim reports on current or past symptoms at different points in time as well as corresponding measures taken via selection of pre-defined choices. Additionally, the current or retrospective status of the patient’s disease as well as the goal of treatment can be updated considering the whole course of the study. |
| H4 | Aggregated data dashboard | A page that presents aggregated and summarised information coming from all patients that participate in the study (descriptive statistics such a min, max, average and percentiles) using an analytics dashboard with modern visualisations. |
| H5 | HCP response log | A page that is used for logging potential responses (eg, referral to a specialist or prescription of medical examinations) of the HCP to the presented information of a specific patient. The HCP can log any actions taken after visiting individual data dashboard of a patient in a structured manner. |