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Home Testing of Blood Counts in Chemotherapy Patients

U

University of Leeds

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Cancer

Treatments

Device: Minicare H-2000

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT02234453
MO14/11295

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators hypothesise that cancer patients on systemic anticancer therapy can measure a home blood count, temperature, record qualitative data and transfer the results electronically to the hospital clinical team.

A low neutrophil blood cell count (neutropenia) can be a dose-limiting toxicity of systemic anti-cancer therapy (SACT) and can be life-threatening when complicated by sepsis. Neutrophil count is usually obtained by venepuncture by a health-care professional. The Minicare H-2000 is a new device which facilitates home self-testing of blood count, temperature and symptoms. The four components are i) blood count recorder using a capillary sample obtained via finger-prick ii) Bluetooth linked thermometer iii) tele-hub collecting patient-reported outcomes and iv) secure communication through the 3G network.

The investigators propose a single-centre, non-randomised feasibility study to test the process of patients on chemotherapy using the Minicare H-2000 to deliver self-tested blood count readings, temperature and qualitative data electronically to the hospital clinical team. The aim is to test training of patients to use a finger-prick method of obtaining blood count, patient ability to perform the test, retention of training, the ability of the Minicare H-2000 to facilitate the data transfer and to test the secondary care interface. This study will provide preliminary data on the potential of Minicare H-2000 to prevent wasted hospital journeys when the blood count has not recovered sufficiently for subsequent SACT cycles. The investigators intend to obtain informed consent to recruit between 30 to 80 patients to this study which will be performed in addition to current local standard of care.

This study enables identification of suboptimal areas of the process prior to investigating the application of the minicare H-2000 within oncology to improve the clinical patient pathway. The investigators ongoing intentions are to trial the use of the Minicare H-2000 to reduce frequency and severity of neutropenic complications, prevent wasted hospital journeys and hospital resources, reduce non-elective hospital admissions and personalise delivery of SACT.

Enrollment

80 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Any solid tumour diagnosis being managed by either medical or clinical oncologists.
  • Patients receiving one or more systemic chemotherapy drugs or targeted therapy at Leeds Cancer Centre.
  • Adults ≥ 18 years.
  • Live within boundaries of Local Care Direct service provision.
  • Live in post-code with good 2G, 3G or GPRS connectivity according to coverage map.

Exclusion criteria

  • On hormone treatment only for their cancer.
  • Participating in the active phase of a therapeutic clinical trial.
  • Inability to give informed consent due to mental capacity or language barrier.
  • Patient or carer unable or unlikely to be able to perform fine manipulation required to use lancet or cartridge to obtain capillary blood sample and result.
  • Known inherited or acquired bleeding disorder.
  • History of haematological malignancy.
  • Known poorly controlled anti-coagulation (INR>3.0 within 6 months)
  • Prisoner in custody of HM Prison Service.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

80 participants in 1 patient group

Cancer patients
Experimental group
Description:
Adult patients with solid tumours receiving systemic anti-cancer therapy who are able to use the Minicare H-2000.
Treatment:
Device: Minicare H-2000

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Geoff Hall, PhD, FRCP

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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