Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00282516

Asthma In-Home Monitoring (AIM) Trial

"Internet-based Home Monitoring and Education of Children With Asthma is Comparable to Ideal, Office-based Care: Results of a One-year, Asthma In-Home Monitoring (AIM) Trial"

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
120 (actual)
Sponsor
Tripler Army Medical Center · Federal
Sex
All
Age
6 Years – 17 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

OBJECTIVE: Determine whether home asthma telemonitoring using store-and-forward technology improves outcomes when compared to in-person, office-based visits.

Detailed description

OBJECTIVE: Determine whether home asthma telemonitoring using store-and-forward technology improves outcomes when compared to in-person, office-based visits. METHODS: 120 patients 6-17 yrs with persistent asthma were randomized into two groups: office or virtual. Both groups followed the same ambulatory clinical pathway for 12 months. Office patients received traditional in-person education and case management. Virtual patients received computers, Internet connection, and in-home Web-based case management and received education via the study web site. They also recorded and forwarded a video of peak flow and inhaler use to their case manager two times a week for 6 weeks then once a week thereafter and submitted daily asthma diaries electronically via the web site. Virtual patients were seen in-person only 3 times. Regimen adherence was assessed by monitoring therapeutic (controller medication use, video medication use) and diagnostic (asthma symptom diary and peak flow submitted electronically) outcomes. Disease control outcome measures included quality of life, utilization of services, and symptom control. RESULTS: 120 volunteers (45 females) were enrolled. The groups were clinically comparable: office 22 females, 38 males 9.0 + 3.0 yrs (mean + SD) virtual 23 females, 37 males, 10.2 + 3.1 yrs. Virtual patients had higher metered-dose inhaler/valved holding chamber score than the office group at 52 weeks (94% vs 89%, p \< 0.05), a higher adherence to daily asthma symptom diary submission (35.4% vs 20.8 %, p \< 0.01), less participant time (636 vs 713 patient months, p \< 0.05), and were older (10.2 + 3.1 years virtual, 9.0 + 3.0 office, p \< 0.05). Caregivers in both groups perceived an increase in quality of life (p\<0.05) and an increase in asthma knowledge scores from baseline (p \< 0.01). There were no other outcome differences in therapeutic or disease control or outcome measures. CONCLUSION: Virtual patients achieved excellent asthma therapeutic and disease control outcomes. When compared to idealized office-based care they were more adherent to diary submission and had better inhaler scores at 52 weeks than office-based patients. Store-and-forward telemedicine technology and case management provides an additional tool to assist in the management of children with persistent asthma.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREIn-home telemonitoring of pediatric patients with persistent asthma

Timeline

Start date
2003-04-01
Primary completion
2004-04-01
Completion
2004-04-01
First posted
2006-01-26
Last updated
2025-02-10

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00282516. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.