Home-monitoring after acute pediatric lung disease
- Conditions
- ung disease, asthma
- Registration Number
- NL-OMON21683
- Lead Sponsor
- .A. (Collaboration Juliana Children’s Hospital & CHDR)
- Brief Summary
Not available
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- Recruiting
- Sex
- Not specified
- Target Recruitment
- 90
1. Signed informed consent from both parents prior to any study-mandated procedure.
2. Admission to the pediatric ward of Juliana Children’s Hospital, determined by the attending physician at the time of admission to be due to:
a. Community acquired pneumonia or bronchiolitis (lower respiratory tract infection) (Age 2-12)
b. Preschool wheezing (Age 2-6)
c. Asthma exacerbation with a previous history of asthma (Age 6-12)
1. (interstitial) Lung disease other than infection, asthma or preschool wheezing, cardiac disease, neuromuscular disease, diabetes or any other chronic condition that is associated with impaired activity level.
2. Children that have a mental or motor impairment.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- Observational non invasive
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Physical activity level (step count) during admission, directly after admission and one month after admission.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method - Hours of sleep and sleep pattern<br>- Mean heart rate during admission and at home, data collected via smartwatch<br>- Daily temperature using Nokia Thermo (children with preschool wheezing and lower respiratory tract infection)<br>- Daily FEV1/PEF/FVC measurements via portable spirometer (patients with asthma)<br>- Daily questions / symptom scores via smartphone app:<br>a. Asthma control diary (ACD) for patients with asthma<br>b. Respiratory symptom scores for patients with pneumonia and bronchiolitis<br>c. Medication use and activity estimation<br>d. Parent-reported recovery<br>- Proportion of patients with good compliance to study tasks, stratified by age- and disease groups.<br>- End-of-study questionnaire for parents and children about the experience and tolerability of this method of data collection.