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Home Versus Postal Testing for Faecal Calprotectin: a Feasibility Study

Completed
Conditions
Crohn's Disease
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
Ulcerative Colitis
Interventions
Device: IBDoc home test for faecal calprotectin
Registration Number
NCT02542917
Lead Sponsor
King's College Hospital NHS Trust
Brief Summary

This trial will test, in a representative group of IBD patients, the acceptability of - and adherence to - the IBDoc test (a new home test for faecal calprotectin in the monitoring of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)).

Detailed Description

Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) are forms of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) that require long-term monitoring. People with these conditions require regular and repeat testing, sometimes with endoscopy, to assess the state of the disease. Many centres worldwide now use a stool test called faecal calprotectin (FCALP) as an accurate reflection of endoscopic disease activity - meaning that people with IBD do not need 'routine' endoscopy to assess their disease. FCALP can also be used to give a prediction of what will happen to a person's IBD in the near future.

As such, FCALP is an excellent and highly cost-effective test in IBD. However, uptake is often low (as with all stool tests) particularly because the sample needs to be taken at home and delivered in to the laboratory or hospital to be tested. People still therefore need to make an effort to submit samples and find this inconvenient. Furthermore, treatments for IBD are increasingly being given at home (usually self-administered injections). While beneficial for people with IBD, it is more difficult to keep track of such patients in the hospital service as they attend less regularly. A test that can be done at home, while making results available to the hospital team, is therefore desirable.

New technology allows reliable testing of FCALP at home, using a smartphone app (IBDoc-TM, Buhlmann Laboratories) within a few minutes. The test kit is packaged with everything required (including gloves, sample 'capture' paper, disposal bag, etc). An instructional video is available within the app itself.

Apart from testing whether patients adhere to the testing schedule, the investigators will also compare their experiences of the IBDoc test, health anxieties, locus of control, and satisfaction vs postal and traditional 'drop-off' test. Validated questionnaires will include: GAD7, PHQ9, IBDC, CBRQ and MHLC as well as a proprietary satisfaction questionnaire at the end of the study.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
54
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patients with inflammatory bowel disease diagnosed at least 6 months prior to study entry
  • Willing to participate in home testing and have smartphone
  • Able to understand English or explanation via interpreter, and provide written consent
Exclusion Criteria
  • Participants without smartphone (Android or iOS)
  • Unable to understand English (excl. via interpreter)
  • No previous experience of submitting stool samples for faecal calprotectin measurement

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
All patientsIBDoc home test for faecal calprotectinIBDoc home test for faecal calprotectin
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Adherence to testing schedule (overall >75%)6 months

As this is a feasibility study there is no 'outcome' measure as such; We are testing the adherence to the study protocol as the main outcome of this study

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Any change in health locus of control score6 months

Any change in MHLC score from study start to end

Any change in cognitive behavioural response score6 months

Any change in CBRQ-32 score from study start to end

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