Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT04074057

Effectiveness of a Novel Mobile App Based Cardiac Rehabilitation

Effectiveness of a Novel Mobile App Based Cardiac Rehabilitation Compared to Traditional Centre-based, Therapist Driven Cardiac Rehabilitation for Patients Post Coronary Revascularisation : A Non-inferiority Pilot Study

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
34 (estimated)
Sponsor
Tan Tock Seng Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

n Tan Tock Seng (TTSH), Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is one of the top 4 reasons for admissions with 948 percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) procedures done in year 2016. International guidelines recommend that all patients complete CR after PCI, as it plays a critical role in reducing five-year cardiovascular mortality and the risk of cardiovascular-related hospital admission. However, the rate of completion of CR has been found to be low as only 19% of post PCI patients completed CR in 2016. According to a patient survey conducted, the main reason for non-completion is the inconvenience experienced by patients from needing to return to hospital weekly. In addition, poor compliance to prescribed home exercises limits the effectiveness of exercise training. Hence, there is a pertinent need to activate patients to engage in self-directed CR in a safe and effective manner to target these issues. Current solutions to increase participation and compliance involve strategies have been limited. Participation and compliance to prescribed exercises recorded via brochures and activity diaries have been limited by difficulties experienced by patients when providing this information, posing a risk of recall bias or the risk of misplacing their activity logs. Mobile applications targeted at increasing fitness addresses the problem of the risk of misplacing activity logs but is still subjected to recall bias as self-input of multiple data is required. Exercise guidelines within these applications are also generic and does not adhere to international exercise training guidelines targeted at patients after coronary revascularisation. In order to address these gaps, there is a need for a technology enabled solution that can provide evidence-based CR programme with constant HR monitoring which offers direct feedback to the patients and at the same time affordable and easy to use. "Heart-Track" is a novel mobile app based CR model of care that utilises a technology-enabled device designed specifically for patients post PCI to complete CR at their convenience, while ensuring that evidence-based clinical outcomes are achieved.

Detailed description

In Tan Tock Seng (TTSH), Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is one of the top 4 reasons for admissions with 948 percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) procedures done in year 2016. International guidelines recommend that all patients complete CR after PCI, as it plays a critical role in reducing five-year cardiovascular mortality and the risk of cardiovascular-related hospital admission. However, the rate of completion of CR has been found to be low as only 19% of post PCI patients completed CR in 2016. According to a patient survey conducted, the main reason for non-completion is the inconvenience experienced by patients from needing to return to hospital weekly. In addition, poor compliance to prescribed home exercises limits the effectiveness of exercise training. Hence, there is a pertinent need to activate patients to engage in self-directed CR in a safe and effective manner to target these issues. Current solutions to increase participation and compliance involve strategies have been limited. Participation and compliance to prescribed exercises recorded via brochures and activity diaries have been limited by difficulties experienced by patients when providing this information, posing a risk of recall bias or the risk of misplacing their activity logs. Mobile applications targeted at increasing fitness addresses the problem of the risk of misplacing activity logs but is still subjected to recall bias as self-input of multiple data is required. Exercise guidelines within these applications are also generic and does not adhere to international exercise training guidelines targeted at patients after coronary revascularisation. In order to address these gaps, there is a need for a technology enabled solution that can provide evidence-based CR programme with constant HR monitoring which offers direct feedback to the patients and at the same time affordable and easy to use. "Heart-Track" is a novel mobile app based CR model of care that utilises a technology-enabled device designed specifically for patients post PCI to complete CR at their convenience, while ensuring that evidence-based clinical outcomes are achieved. The key components of "Heart-Track" are: 1. Exercise principles based on international guidelines 2. Gamification; 3. Continuous heart rate monitoring; 4. Adaptation to local context. As Heart-track is the first of its kind, being designed for use in the local context, findings from research is important in determining its efficacy when compared to traditional cardiac rehabilitation.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERConventional Cardiac Rehab Classesconventional weekly CR programme lasting 8-12 sessions.
DEVICEHeart TrackKey components of "Heart-Track" are a heart rate sensor, a mobile app and a remote monitoring portal. The "Heart-Track" mobile app is synchronized/ connected to Polar heart rate sensor through bluetooth in order to provide continous heart rate monitoring when subjects are exercising. This is to ensure safety and exercise effectiveness.

Timeline

Start date
2019-05-01
Primary completion
2020-05-31
Completion
2020-05-31
First posted
2019-08-29
Last updated
2019-08-29

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Singapore

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04074057. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.