The CirrhoCare trial is a multi-centre, open label randomised controlled trial in patients with decompensated cirrhosis. The trial aims to investigate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of CirrhoCare digital home monitoring and management with current standard of care in these patients.
Cirrhosis, progressive scaring of the liver- has many causes, principally, excessive alcohol intake, fatty-liver and viral infections. Unlike many chronic diseases, cirrhosis deaths are increasing rapidly year-on-year. It is the third commonest cause of premature, UK working-age deaths, with 62,000 years of working-life lost each year and NHS care costs of £4.53bn annually. One quarter of all UK cirrhosis patients are at-risk of acute decompensation, whereby complications such as fluid-overload, confusion and infections arise, requiring hospital-emergency treatment. Currently, decompensated cirrhosis patients require regular hospital clinical assessments to detect these new complications. Even following hospital discharge, readmission with new decompensating complications approaches 37% in 4 weeks. This disease burden, compounded by increasing alcohol and obesity-driven liver disease, means demand for specialist liver services outweighs current capacity in a resource-stretched healthcare system. Moreover, regional variation of specialist liver services also impacts on illness and deaths, leading to a postcode lottery of care access and geographical inequity. The CirrhoCare trial, addresses this urgent clinical-need through an innovative cirrhosis management system, including home-monitoring of decompensated cirrhosis patients, measuring vital signs such as heart rate and blood pressure (using low cost, sensing technology), assessing weight (smart-scale) and mental ability (smartphone app), all of which are impacted as cirrhosis progresses. By efficiently and securely collecting data on CyberLiver's management-system (platform), CirrhoCare provides a decision-facilitating tool, incorporating individual-patient data, helping liver-physicians to optimise and personalise treatment in the community. The CirrhoCare trial investigators also plan to assess clinical and cost effectiveness of CirrhoCare management and seek regulatory approvals. This innovative aspect of cirrhosis management will be more acceptable and convenient for patients. It will also deliver community care with environmental, sustainable benefits, through reduced hospital visits, despite increasing service demands. The cost- effectiveness analysis will generate value-for-money evidence of CirrhoCare management, and the clinical evidence needed to inform future adoption into the NHS.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
214
This is a UKCA-marked, digital-therapeutic system consisting of: * clinical-grade, cirrhosis monitoring sensors and a smartphone app, * a clinical team-facing, decision-facilitating dashboard, and * CyberLiver's platform incorporating hepatic algorithms. The CirrhoCare kit consists of: - Apple watch - iPhone with an in-built CirrhoCare app - a digital Bluetooth-linked system comprised of: \~Wellue BP monitor, \~Wellue weighing scale \~Bluetooth thermometer. The CirrhoCare management system also includes: * The clinician dashboard: All participant data collected through the app will be reviewed by the clinical team via the clinician dashboard. * The CirrhoCare algorithm: This algorithm will advise the clinical team if the participant is at high, medium, or low risk of developing a particular outcome event, based on monitoring data collected each day from the participant which is compared to the baseline values and average values collected over the first week of monitoring.
The Royal London Hospital, Barts Health NHS Trust
London, London, United Kingdom
Number of hospital interventions from new-liver related complications
The CirrhoCare trial will investigate whether the CirrhoCare management system leads to a reduction in the requirement for unplanned medical intervention from new-liver related complications over 90 days from hospital discharge.
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation
Effects on CLIF-C AD score
To determine the effects of the CirrhoCare management system on the Chronic Liver Failure Consortium Acute Decompensation (CLIF-C AD) score. \[Minimum score is 0 and there is no upper limit. The higher the score the worse the outcome)
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation
Effects on MELD score
To determine the effects of the CirrhoCare management system on the Model for End-Stage Liver Disease score ( MELD). \[Score ranges from 6-40. The higher the score the worse the outcome\]
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation
To determine the effects of the CirrhoCare management system on the number of liver-related deaths at 90 days
To determine the effects of the CirrhoCare management system on the number of liver-related deaths at 90 days.
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation
Healthcare resource use analysis
To assess healthcare resource use through analysis of the number of healthcare appointments during the study period
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation
Healthcare cost analysis
To assess the financial costs associated with healthcare interventions during the study period (measured in British Pound Sterling).
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.
Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust
Birmingham, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGRoyal Sussex County Hospital, University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust
Brighton, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGWalsgrave General Hospital, University Hospital Coventry & Warwickshire NHS Trust
Coventry, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGRoyal Liverpool University Hospital, Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Liverpool, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGWhittington Hospital, Whittington Health NHS Trust
London, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGRoyal Free Hospital, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust
London, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGSt Thomas Hospital, Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
London, United Kingdom
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGKing's College Hospital, King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
London, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGSt George's Hospital, St George's university Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
London, United Kingdom
RECRUITING...and 5 more locations
User experience and engagement
To assess user experience and engagement through questionnaires and interviews : The questionnaires will be graded from 1-10 for each question, with 0 is extremely negative as a response, and 10 very highly positive response.
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation
Quality of Life (EQ-5D-5L) assessment
To assess health-related quality of Life through the EuroQol 5-Dimension 5-Level (EQ-5D-5L) questionnaire. The score ranges from -0.59 to 1, with a score of 1 representing the best possible health status.
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation
Frailty assessment
To assess frailty using the Liver Frailty Index. The score ranges from 1.0 to 7.0 with higher scores representing increased levels of frailty.
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation
Mortality
To assess mortality (overall survival)
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation
Number of hospital readmissions
To assess the overall number of readmissions to hospital
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation
Effects of the individual components making up the primary outcome
Assessment of the effects of the individual components making up the primary outcome. Each complication of cirrhosis will be individually assessed between CirrhoCare and standard of care groups. \[Ascites based on Gr 1-3 and HE based on West Haven criteria 1-4; Infection Positive or Negative culture\]
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation
Longitudinal effects of all secondary outcomes
The longitudinal effects of all secondary outcomes will be investigated by using an appropriate model that incorporates the Day 28 and Day 56 visits in addition to the Day 90 visit
Time frame: Day 28, Day 56, Day 90
Length of hospital readmissions
Assessment of the length of stay for each hospital readmission for a given participant recorded in days.
Time frame: 90 days from randomisation