Integration of a personalised mobile health (mHealth) application into the care of patients with brain tumours: proof-of-concept study (IDEAL stage 1)

Author:

Gvozdanovic AndrewORCID,Jozsa FelixORCID,Fersht Naomi,Grover Patrick James,Kirby Georgina,Kitchen Neil,Mangiapelo Riccardo,McEvoy Andrew,Miserocchi Anna,Patel Rayna,Thorne Lewis,Williams Norman,Kosmin Michael,Marcus Hani JORCID

Abstract

ObjectivesBrain tumours lead to significant morbidity including a neurocognitive, physical and psychological burden of disease. The extent to which they impact the multiple domains of health is difficult to capture leading to a significant degree of unmet needs. Mobile health tools such as Vinehealth have the potential to identify and address these needs through real-world data generation and delivery of personalised educational material and therapies. We aimed to establish the feasibility of Vinehealth integration into brain tumour care, its ability to collect real-world and (electronic) patient-recorded outcome (ePRO) data, and subjective improvement in care.DesignA mixed-methodology IDEAL stage 1 study.SettingA single tertiary care centre.ParticipantsSix patients consented and four downloaded and engaged with the mHealth application throughout the 12 weeks of the study.Main outcome measuresOver a 12-week period, we collected real-world and ePRO data via Vinehealth. We assessed qualitative feedback from mixed-methodology surveys and semistructured interviews at recruitment and after 2 weeks.Results565 data points were captured including, but not limited to: symptoms, activity, well-being and medication. EORTC QLQ-BN20 and EQ-5D-5L completion rates (54% and 46%) were impacted by technical issues; 100% completion rates were seen when ePROs were received. More brain cancer tumour-specific content was requested. All participants recommended the application and felt it improved care.ConclusionsOur findings indicate value in an application to holistically support patients living with brain cancer tumours and established the feasibility and safety of further studies to more rigorously assess this.

Funder

National Institute for Health Research

the Wellcome/ESPRC Centre for Interventional and Surgical Sciences, University College London

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Surgery

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