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RAMP is a pilot study examining the use of an Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) Monitoring Program during the early stages of treating ADHD in children living in rural settings. This trial will enroll 36 caregiver/infant dyads across 2 sites and will evaluate feasibility endpoints rather than clinical outcomes. Enrolled participants will be randomized 1:1 to the intervention group (RAMP reports) or control group (digital education handouts). The study duration is 10 months, including start-up, enrollment and intervention, and data analysis and manuscript submission.
Full description
The RAMP study is designed to examine the use of an attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) Monitoring Program during the early stages of treating ADHD in children living in rural settings. It is a multi-site pilot study conducted across two Institutional Development Award (IDeA) States Pediatric Clinical Trials Network (ISPCTN) sites in conjunction with four practices with high rural and/or underserved populations.
The Remote ADHD Monitoring Program (RAMP) will include provider ADHD Best Practice education, caregiver and teacher prompts for frequent RAMP Reports of inattention and hyperactivity symptoms and a provider dashboard with enrolled children. The RAMP Report includes the publicly available Vanderbilt Rating Scales (henceforth shortened to Vanderbilt Assessment), which is a commonly used, guideline-recommended tool for both diagnosis and management of ADHD for use by parents and teachers.
Families will be approached until 36 caregiver/child dyads are enrolled. Those enrolled will be randomized 1:1 to either the intervention group or control group. The intervention group will be enrolled in the RAMP, with prompts to provide frequent reports including ADHD symptoms. The control group will provide ADHD symptom reports through paper forms (usual care), on a provider determined schedule.
The intervention group will be enrolled in the RAMP platform and will receive text-based requests for reports with embedded links to fill out the RAMP questionnaires weekly for 4 weeks, then monthly for 2 months. The control group will receive digital education handouts about age-appropriate pediatric health topics weekly for 4 weeks, then monthly for 2 months.
For the intervention group, the child's teacher can voluntarily return the RAMP questionnaires as well, but will not have direct contact with the study team. The child's provider will also be a participant for the intervention group, and will receive requests to review the submitted RAMP reports.
The primary endpoint for this study is to evaluate the number of clinical assessments per participant that are completed by caregivers and teacher and returned to providers for ADHD management.
The secondary endpoint for this study is to evaluate the proportion of all submitted RAMP reports that are reviewed by providers.
The results of this pilot will be used to design a full-scale efficacy trial in additional rural sites to expand diversity and assess generalizability.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
The child must
The Primary caregiver must
The provider must
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Child:
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Interventional model
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36 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Song Ounpraseuth, PhD; Matthew Henry, MSc
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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