In:
Journal of Crohn's and Colitis, Oxford University Press (OUP), Vol. 17, No. Supplement_1 ( 2023-01-30), p. i35-i37
Abstract:
Telemedicine is not consistently superior to standard care in the management of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Non-inferiority is an acceptable outcome if telemedicine improves the efficacy and efficiency of care. Owing to the positive results of the TECCU app (Telemonitoring of Crohn’s Disease [CD] and Ulcerative Colitis [Au] ) in a pilot trial1, we aimed to evaluate the time in remission and quality of life (QoL) of IBD patients controlled by telemonitoring (G_TECCU), compared to standard care (G_Control) after 12 weeks. 1Del Hoyo J et al. J Med Internet Res. 2018;20(11):e11602. Methods A 2-arm randomized multicenter study with a non-inferiority design was performed in 29 IBD centers in Spain. Adult IBD patients who initiated therapy with immunosuppressant or biological agents for disease activity were included. Exclusion criteria were: patients with ileorectal/ileo-pouch anal anastomosis, stoma, active perianal disease, no Internet access. Time in remission was evaluated with Harvey-Bradshaw/Walmsley indexes (according to CD]/UC, respectively), fecal calprotectin (FC) and reactive C protein (RCP). QoL was assessed with IBDQ-9, medication adherence with Morisky-Green index and patient satisfaction with a questionnaire derived from CSQ-8. Results We included 157 patients, and 126 were analyzed after 12 weeks of follow-up. The demographic and clinical variables are listed in Table 1. The time in remission was not inferior in patients who used the TECCU app (mean 4.2 weeks [SD 3.8]) compared with patients who received standard care (mean 4.2 weeks [SD 3.2] ; difference 0.03 [95%CI -1.21 to 1.27]; p=0.017) (Figure 1). In patients with UC, disease activity improved significantly in both TECCU (mean SCCAI improvement -3.60 [SD 3.25] ; p= 0.001) and standard care groups (-3.89 [SD 4.56]; p=0.001;). In patients with CD, clinical activity also improved significantly in both groups (mean Harvey-Bradshaw improvement -1.65 [SD 2.51]; p=0.001 in TECCU; -2.24 [SD 4.15] ; p=0.001 in standard care group). Similarly, FC and CRP values improved significantly in both groups (Figure 2). Considering QoL, the IBDQ-9 score improved significantly in TECCU (mean 11.29 [SD15.8]; p & lt;0.001) and standard care groups (16.59 [SD 22.1]; p & lt;0.001). Medication adherence improved significantly in TECCU group and it was superior compared with standard care (Figure 3). Patient satisfaction was superior to 90% in both groups at week 12. Conclusion In IBD patients who initiate biological agents or immunomodulators, TECCU app is not inferior to standard care to maintain remission in the short-term. Telemonitoring with TECCU app associated a higher improvement in medication adherence and an increase in QoL. Long-term results are needed to confirm it.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
1873-9946
,
1876-4479
DOI:
10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjac190.0026
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Publication Date:
2023
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2389631-0
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