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Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects 85,000 people in France. Medical care for this disease represents 2% of the Health Insurance budget.
Patients on dialysis frequently experience severe or overwhelming symptoms which contributes to poor health related quality of life (HRQoL). However, taking into account the measurement of the patients' symptoms by the patients themselves would allow to improve their HRQoL by putting more emphasis on the results that matter the most to the patients. It would also improve information and decision-making between nephrology care team and patients.
Systematic use of patients reported outcomes measures (PROMs) is not widely used due to a number of barriers including logistics and feasibility.
How will the F-SWIFT Pilot project address the barriers associated with PROMs? By choosing short questionnaires to complete By providing feedback on the severity of symptoms to the dialysis team and to patients By making links to good practice recommendations included in the feedback Allowing electronic collection of PROMs The research question therefore asks whether regular symptom monitoring with feedback to dialysis staff improves dialysis patient's outcomes? To do this, a pilot study must be carried out with the following main objectives Test the feasibility of integrating electronic measurements of PROMs with feedback to the dialysis team.
Three centers are participating in this pilot study:
The project will take place in 2 phases :
Phase 1 To identify the needs and expectations of patients and health professionals in relation to a systematic electronic measurement of symptoms made by the patients themselves.
Focus groups (interviews) will be conducted with patients (n=15) and healthcare professionals (n=15).
Phase 2 (n=50-60 patients) To develop and test an electronic PROMs system allowing
Full description
Patients reported outcomes (PROs) are defined as any measure of a patient's health status reported directly by the patient, without interpretation by health care professionals or others. It is how the patient feels about their health condition or treatment. Although assessing patients' well-being and managing their symptoms are the foundations of clinical care, the care patients receive often does not meet their needs. For example, healthcare professionals are often unaware of the presence and severity of their patients' symptoms. The integration of PROs into clinical trials, clinical care, and quality of care assessment stems from the need to place greater emphasis on the outcomes that matter most to patients.
To date, primary clinical trial endpoints and efficacy metrics in nephrology have been dominated by objective biochemical and process measures (percentage of patients with arteriovenous fistula). These measures fail to reflect what constitutes a good outcome from the patient's perspective, and ultimately there is often very little information about how treatments or any other interventions affect the patient's experience A growing number of studies report a high frequency of symptoms in adult dialysis patients. Patients frequently present with signs of severe pain, fatigue, nausea, cramping, itching, sleep disturbance, and depression, which are strongly associated with poor quality of life. More than half of patients experience fatigue, pruritus (relentless itching), and constipation despite available effective treatments.
In nephrology, studies have focused on survival or biomarker studies and very little on interventions to improve what was a priority for patients, i.e., treating their symptoms and improving their quality of life.
Numerous experiments have been conducted in other fields such as oncology. These studies have shown a real benefit of taking into account measures of perceived health on improving symptom management, treatment side effects and patient survival. Patients for whom regular perceived health follow-up with feedback to oncologists is implemented have a better survival than with traditional follow-up. This is mainly explained by earlier identification and management of symptoms (preventing or reducing the occurrence of downstream adverse events) or side effects of chemotherapy (allowing better tolerance and adherence to the full chemotherapy regimen).
Patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) treated with dialysis have poorer survival than patients with certain cancers and a particularly degraded quality of life. Symptoms reported by dialysis patients are often underestimated or even unrecognized by the dialysis team for a variety of reasons. Therefore, it seems possible to improve patient management, outcome, and quality of life through better consideration of symptoms provided the dialysis team is aware of them.
Many questions are still open. Which PRO to measure? How should it be measured? How to store and use the data? How to interpret the results? How can they be integrated with other measures in patient management and treatment decisions? The impact of routine PRO measurements is controversial, especially because of methodological biases in the various studies.
A clinical trial will be set up and nested in the national RIEN registry, entitled F-SWIFT (French-Symptom monitoring WIth Feedback Trial) to improve symptom management in order to address the unmet needs of dialysis CKD patients and improve their quality of life.
The research question posed is whether regular self-reported symptom monitoring with immediate feedback and management recommendations to the dialysis team improves the outcome of dialysis patients.
The F-SWIFT study is the French side of the Australian SWIFT study which has obtained funding and started in 2019.
irst, some technical and logistical feasibility questions need to be answered to adapt the SWIFT study to the French context. Indeed, to date, the PRO measurement is not a routine measurement in dialysis facilities. It therefore seems important to approach patients and professionals to explore their expectations and needs in terms of integrating PRO as a routine management indicator. The first phase is therefore the realization of a pilot study, which is the subject of this protocol.
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Inclusion criteria
Patients
Health professionals - Volunteer healthcare professionals in the participating departments (CHRU Nancy, ALTIR, CHU Nîmes) with at least 3 months experience in a dialysis department
For the test phase of symptom collection in dialysis services:
Exclusion criteria
The non-inclusion criteria for the focus group phase are as follows :
Patients
Health Professionals
The non-inclusion criteria for the test phase of the collection are as follows:
65 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Carole AYAV; Amandine ZIEGLER
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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