Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05595629

App-based Remote Blood Pressure Monitoring

Implementing an App-based Remote Blood Pressure Monitoring Program to Reduce Health Disparities Among Women With Hypertension During Pregnancy

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
120 (actual)
Sponsor
Women and Infants Hospital of Rhode Island · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 55 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Remote postpartum blood pressure monitoring program with text messages has been shown to increase adherence to recommended postpartum blood pressure checks among those with hypertension at discharge from birth hospitalization, but these programs require medically trained professionals to respond to each individual text message. A bluetooth-enabled blood pressure cuff that synchs automatically a smartphone application that leverages Artificial Intelligence to provide tailored recommendations based on recorded blood pressure measurements--and can also provide on-demand education on hypertension--may be less costly way to provide similar support.

Detailed description

Preeclampsia or gestational hypertension-described as hypertension in pregnancy-affects up to 10% of all pregnancies and is a main driver of maternal morbidity in Rhode Island and the United States. The rates of hypertension in pregnancy have disproportionately affected women of color and may explain why racial minorities have higher maternal morbidity. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has called for novel interventions to improve health equity and maternal morbidity outcomes among women hypertension in pregnancy. Technology-based interventions (i.e. remote blood pressure monitoring, telehealth visits, text-based communication) have improved access to care but, to date, have not yet demonstrated an effect on reducing maternal morbidity outcomes. It is possible that the lack of effect on maternal morbidity is due to the simplicity of the technology-based interventions previously employed (i.e. text message-based systems). Advanced digital health interventions on blood pressure--namely remote blood pressure monitoring through Bluetooth-enabled blood pressure cuffs and incorporation of a commercially available smartphone application that includes education and patient support as part of a "hypertension in pregnancy pathway"-may more effectively improve perinatal health equity compared to standard SMS-based messaging by reducing perinatal morbidity/mortality among women of color hypertension during their pregnancy. The investigators propose a pilot randomized control trial to examine the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary estimates of effects of smartphone application-based (app-based) Bluetooth enabled remote blood pressure monitoring (intervention group) when compared to a SMS (short message system such as text message) based remote blood pressure monitoring group (control group). The investigators' long-term goal is to use the most cost-effective intervention (app-based vs SMS-based remote blood pressure monitoring) to improve health equity and maternal morbidity outcomes for pregnant women with hypertension during pregnancy who live in Rhode Island and beyond. The investigators plan to use pilot data from this proposal to support an efficacy trial powered to detect differences in maternal morbidity outcomes between app-based remote blood pressure monitoring and routine care with SMS monitoring. In addition, this proposal stems from a hospital-wide effort at Women \& Infants Hospital (WIH) to reduce racial disparities among women of color in terms of frequency of severe maternal morbidity (SMM). SMM is a metric created by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that includes blood transfusion as well as adverse outcomes ranging from arrhythmia to eclampsia to intubation. SMM associated with hypertension is driven by asymptomatic postpartum hypertension. This is easily identified and managed prior to becoming SMM when patients adhere to recommended blood pressure checks after discharge. Excluding blood transfusion (which does not pertain to hypertension), the overall rate of SMM among women with hypertension during pregnancy who deliver at WIH is 6.6%. However, there is a significant difference along racial and ethnic lines: the rate of SMM in the setting of hypertension among black women is 6.8% compared to 4.5% among white women, and the rate of SMM in the setting of preeclampsia is 9.4% among Hispanic women compared to 4.9% among non-Hispanic women. The overall dual aim of the initiative is to reduce the disparity in rates of SMM among those with hypertension between black and white women and between Hispanic and non-Hispanic women by at least 33% by December 31, 2022. As part of WIH's equity initiative, automatic blood pressure cuffs (non Bluetooth enabled) will be provided to consenting women with hypertension at discharge from delivery hospitalization as part of routine care. In this study, rates of SMM before the hospital-wide implementation of SMS-based remote blood pressure monitoring will be compared to those after. Thus, for this proposal, this proposal exploring whether app-based remote blood pressure monitoring is required to decrease maternal morbidity compared to standard care with remote SMS blood pressure monitoring.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALApp-based remote blood pressure monitoringFully synched bluetooth-enabled remote blood pressure monitoring using a smartphone application. The digital health company, Twistle, has modified an existing postpartum hypertension pathway in their app according to our hospital's management algorithm.
BEHAVIORALtext-message based remote blood pressure monitoringParticipants will receive automatic blood pressure cuffs and instructions as to how to upload their measurements to the Electronic Medical Record.

Timeline

Start date
2022-11-07
Primary completion
2023-06-30
Completion
2023-08-30
First posted
2022-10-27
Last updated
2025-02-19
Results posted
2025-02-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05595629. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.