MedPath

Impact of Tele-visit on Patients Continous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) Follow-up by Home Care Provider

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Interventions
Procedure: tele-visit
Registration Number
NCT05653804
Lead Sponsor
AGIR à Dom
Brief Summary

To determine the impact of telecare on continous positive airway pressure (CPAP) patients follow up by home care provider (HCP)

Detailed Description

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) syndrome is a chronic respiratory pathology affecting 4% of french adult population and reference treatment for moderate to severe forms of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSA) is continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP).

However, CPAP treatment is binding, so nearly a quarter of patients abandoning treatment at 1 year and nearly half of them at 3 years. Support for these patients on CPAP must therefore be optimal and seek patient satisfaction; HCP (Home Care Provider) plays an important role in this follow-up.

Since 2018 in France, teleconsultation entered on common law but was little used. The pandemic has disrupted the habits of care and patients monitoring by developing remote monitoring. Home Care Providers (HCP) have also been forced to organize remote monitoring, particularly for the annual follow-up visit (technical tele-visit).

The impact of the annual follow-up visits of HCP by tele-visit has never been clinically evaluated. If its clinical relevance were demonstrated and patient satisfaction confirmed, this follow-up modality could become, like telecare, a new standard for the follow-up of patients on CPAP.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
250
Inclusion Criteria
  • Age ≥ 18 years
  • CPAP ≥ 12 months and annual followed by "AGIR à dom" health care provider.
  • Compliance with CPAP ≥ 4h/night and AHI ≤ 5 events/hour on machine report for the 3 months prior to inclusion
Exclusion Criteria
  • Follow-up by AGIR à dom. for an other service than package F9.1 : CPAP follow-up and remote monitoring
  • Unacceptable level of mask leakage
  • Patient unavailable or willing to move within the next 12 months to an area not covered by AGIR à dom.
  • Patient considered by the investigator to be unfit for a tele-visit

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
tele-visit by HCPtele-visitPatients receive a annual CPAP remote visit by HCP technician, then home visit the following year
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
To compare CPAP compliance between the two management modalitiesOver the 3 months (tele)visit follow-up

CPAP mean compliance between intervention and control groups, adjusted for the three months prior to inclusion : in hours/day, collected on the CPAP remote monitoring report

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
To compare treatment quality on mask leakage between the two management modalitiesOver the 3 months (tele)visit follow-up

Leakage mean level between intervention and control group

To compare occurrence frequency of CPAP-related adverse effect(s) between the two management modalitiesOver the 3 months (tele)visit follow-up

The Side-Effects to CPAP treatment Inventory (SECI) mean score between the intervention and control group.

Each of the 15 items relating to side effects associated with CPAP treatment has three subscales: frequency, breadth of the side effect, and impact on CPAP use.

For each subscale, the patient will complete a five-point Likert-type scale, so the possible range for each subscale is 15 to 75.

A higher score indicates greater frequency of side effects, greater breadth of side effects, and greater intensity of side effects.

To compare impact on quality of life between the two management modalitiesAt 3 months after (tele-)visit follow-up

The EuroQol 5 Dimensions - 5 levels (EQ5D-5L) questionnaire mean score between intervention and control group, adjusted on the baseline score.

it's composed of two parts : A visual analog scale (20 cm line, graduated from 0 to 100 where patient indicates his or her current state of health, 0 being the worst and 100 the best)

the completion of 5 items evaluating mobility, autonomy, daily activities, pain or discomfort and anxiety or depression.

1. indicating no problem

2. indicating slight problems

3. indicating moderate problems

4. indicating severe problems

5. indicating unable to/extreme problems Each state is referred to by a 5-digit code.

To compare follow-up impact in addition to the annual visit between the two management modalitiesOver the 12 months (tele)visit follow-up

Mean number of calls and visits made per patient between control and intervention group

To compare overall patient satisfaction between the two management modalitiesImmediately after the (tele-)visit follow-up

The Consumer Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ-8) mean score between intervention and control groups, after the CPAP (tele-)visit follow-up .

The overall score is calculated by adding the respondent's evaluation score (item evaluation) for each item on the scale. For the CSQ-8 version, the scores therefore range from 8 to 32, with higher values indicating greater satisfaction.

To compare impact on CPAP continuation between the two management modalitiesOver the 12 months (tele)visit follow-up

Rate of CPAP removal between intervention and control group ; the number of CPAP unbundling among participants

To compare treatment effectiveness between the two management modalitiesOver the 12 months (tele)visit follow-up

Apnea Hypopnea Index (AHI) mean between intervention and control group. AHI corresponds to the number of apneas and hypopneas per hour of sleep, collected on the CPAP remote monitoring report.

To evaluate failed visits number between the two care modalitiesOver the 12 months (tele)visit follow-up

Mean number of (tele-)visits requiring a reprogramming (absence, technical problem, last minute deprogramming, home visit...)

To evaluate technician satisfaction with tele-visitsImmediately after the (tele-)visit follow-up

The Televisit Satisfaction Questionnaire (TSQ) questionnaire mean score

14 items, rated between 1 and 5 by the patient. The sum of the items corresponds to a score ranging from 14 to 70.

To compare the impact on daytime sleepiness between the two management modalitiesAt 3 months after (tele-)visit follow-up

Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) mean score between intervention and control group.

All items are assumed to be integers (0-3). The ESS score is the sum of 8 item scores.

0-10 = normal range of sleepiness in healthy adults 11 to 14 = mild sleepiness 15 to 17 = moderate sleepiness 18 to 24 = severe sleepiness

To compare CPAP compliance in medium term between the two management modalitiesOver the 12 months (tele)visit follow-up

CPAP mean compliance between intervention and control group : in hours/day, collected on the CPAP remote monitoring report

To evaluate patient satisfaction with tele-visitsImmediately after the (tele-)visit follow-up

The Televisit Satisfaction Questionnaire (TSQ) mean score

14 items, rated between 1 and 5 by the patient. The sum of the items corresponds to a score ranging from 14 to 70.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

AGIR à dom.

🇫🇷

Meylan, France

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath