Study identifier:D589CL00003
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier:NCT02864342
EudraCT identifier:N/A
CTIS identifier:N/A
A randomized clinical study to assess the impact of Symbicort® pMDI medication reminders on adherence in COPD patients
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD
Phase 4
No
-
All
138
Interventional
40 Years - 130 Years
Allocation: Randomized
Endpoint Classification: -
Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment
Masking: Open Label
Primary Purpose: -
Verified 01 Nov 2018 by AstraZeneca
AstraZeneca
Quintiles, Inc.
A randomized clinical study to assess the impact of Symbicort® pMDI medication reminders on adherence in COPD patients
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a common disease with substantial associated morbidity and mortality. COPD is the third leading cause of death in the US and claimed 133,965 US lives in 2009. In 2011 12.7 million US adults were estimated to have COPD. However, approximately 24 million US adults have evidence of impaired lung function, indicating an under diagnosis of COPD. COPD also has a potentially harmful economic impact. In 2010, COPD resulted in over 10 million office visits, nearly 1.5 million emergency department visits, 700,000 hospitalizations, and 133,575 deaths in the US. In 2010, US total medical treatment costs attributed solely to COPD (i.e., excluding comorbidities) were estimated to be $32.1 billion with an additional $3.9 billion in COPD costs resulting from worker absenteeism. Even in industrialized countries such as the US, where anti-smoking initiatives have been relatively successful, the legacy of past smoking behavior in aging populations ensures that the COPD burden will unavoidably continue to climb over the next 20 to 30 years. Adherence rates for inhaled combination therapy is poor (average 3.9 refills per year). COPD patients with lower adherence tend to have higher overall healthcare costs, as demonstrated in a 24 month study of 33,816 patients in the US, which found: Patients continuing therapy had lower costs of care by $3764 compared with patients who had ceased to take their maintenance therapy. COPD patients with higher adherence to prescribed regimens experienced fewer hospitalizations and lower Medicare costs (-$2185) than those who exhibited lower adherence behaviors. Given the poor adherence with inhaled combination therapy seen in patients with COPD, and associated morbidity/mortality and economic costs, the present study is being conducted to see if medication reminders can be used to improve adherence in this population.
Location
Location
Downingtown, PA, United States, 19335
Location
Marlton, NJ, United States, 08053
Location
Philadelphia, PA, United States, 19140
Location
Clearwater, FL, United States, 37765
Location
Tampa, FL, United States, 33603
Location
Brooklyn, NY, United States, 11229
Location
Charlotte, NC, United States, 28207
Location
Spartanburg, SC, United States, 29303
Arms | Assigned Interventions |
---|---|
Active Comparator: BreatheMate device and application BreatheMate Bluetooth device that attaches to Symbicort pressurized Metered Dose Inhaler (pMDI) and cell phone with application that sends medication and refill reminders and reminders to complete a COPD questionnaire | Device: Arm 1: BreatheMate device with application The service known as ‘BreatheMate’ is a patient support tool that monitors daily Symbicort inhaler use. The BreatheMate service includes a bluetooth monitoring device that is attached to subjects’ Symbicort pMDI inhaler which automatically detects and logs their maintenance medication use. Subjects will receive audio-visual daily reminders (beeps and flashes) on the BreatheMate Bluetooth device. The bluetooth device transmits this data to a cellular phone that is provided to all subjects in the study. Subjects in the intervention group will also receive audio-visual alerts (beeps, flashes) from the bluetooth device to take their medication. |
Placebo Comparator: BreatheMate device without application BreatheMate Bluetooth device that attaches to Symbicort pressurized Metered Dose Inhaler (pMDI) and cell phone without any reminders or alerts. | Device: Arm 2: BreatheMate device without application The service known as ‘BreatheMate’ is a patient support tool that monitors daily Symbicort inhaler use. The BreatheMate service includes a bluetooth monitoring device that is attached to subjects’ Symbicort pMDI inhaler which automatically detects and logs their maintenance medication use. The functionality of audio-visual daily reminders (beeps and flashes) is deactivated for this control group. The BreatheMate service also includes a cellular phone that will display whether the Bluetooth monitoring device is paired and communicating with the cellular phone. The Bluetooth device will transmit data regarding medication usage to the cellular phone. |
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