deltatrials
Completed NA INTERVENTIONAL 2-arm NCT00189852

Supporting Care and Independence at Home

Sponsor: Anchor Trust

Conditions Heart Failure
Updated 6 times since 2017 Last updated: Feb 18, 2016 Started: Nov 30, 2005 Primary completion: Sep 30, 2007 Completion: Feb 28, 2009
This information is for research purposes only and is not medical advice. Consult a healthcare provider before making any medical decision.

This NA trial investigates Heart Failure and is currently completed. Anchor Trust leads this study, which shows 6 recorded versions since 2005 — indicating limited longitudinal coverage. Heart and vascular conditions benefit from the kind of long-term tracking this trial provides.

Study Description(click to expand)

The 2004 Department of Health publication "Improving Chronic Disease Management" highlights that: 17.5 m adults in the UK may be living with a chronic disease; Around 80% of GP admissions relate to chronic disease; Patients with a chronic disease or complications use over 60% of hospital beds. Evidence from the US suggests that people with chronic conditions consume 78% of all health spending. The NHS modernisation agency has suggested that patients with chronic diseases should, in the future, no longer end up in acute beds when they could be treated in a community setting, or supported at home. Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a major chronic disease which has been recognised in the UK with a National Service Framework (NSF) for Coronary Heart Disease. In industrialised countries it affects 1% of the population on average and 10% at 70 years of age. It accounts for 5 per cent of all medical admissions to the hospital (120,000 hospital admissions annually) costing an estimated £360 million to the NHS with 6,000 deaths each year from CHF. The disease has a poor prognosis as within 5 years of diagnosis there is a 50% mortality, and many debilitating, costly and unplanned hospital admissions. Indeed,...

The 2004 Department of Health publication "Improving Chronic Disease Management" highlights that: 17.5 m adults in the UK may be living with a chronic disease; Around 80% of GP admissions relate to chronic disease; Patients with a chronic disease or complications use over 60% of hospital beds. Evidence from the US suggests that people with chronic conditions consume 78% of all health spending. The NHS modernisation agency has suggested that patients with chronic diseases should, in the future, no longer end up in acute beds when they could be treated in a community setting, or supported at home.

Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a major chronic disease which has been recognised in the UK with a National Service Framework (NSF) for Coronary Heart Disease. In industrialised countries it affects 1% of the population on average and 10% at 70 years of age. It accounts for 5 per cent of all medical admissions to the hospital (120,000 hospital admissions annually) costing an estimated £360 million to the NHS with 6,000 deaths each year from CHF.

The disease has a poor prognosis as within 5 years of diagnosis there is a 50% mortality, and many debilitating, costly and unplanned hospital admissions. Indeed, as many as 50% of patients are readmitted within 3 months of initial discharge. It has been suggested that up to 50% of hospital admissions for heart failure are preventable.

Telecare proposes an earlier diagnosis and with more appropriate and timely use of drugs this can increase patient survival and their quality of life. A weight gain of just a few pounds can signal that a chronic heart failure patient is retaining fluid, for example. If caught early enough, the patient may be able to take medication or otherwise manage the problem at home, rather than having to be hospitalised which improves care and saves money. There is extensive evidence that hospitalisation rates in patients with heart failure can be substantially reduced by improved patient education, patient self monitoring of weight, and rapid response to early signs of clinical deterioration. Telehealth interventions for CHF have tended to be based on devices asking specific questions with answers being entered by users. The information provided is then often supplemented with data from weighing scales and blood pressure monitors, with this being forwarded through the telephone system to a central sever. Here medical staff review the data and respond to patients with increasing risk. Automated software is also becoming available that can highlight to practitioners when a certain patient is outside of practitioner defined parameters or is not using their equipment regularly.

Lifestyle monitoring systems, using movement detectors and magnetic proximity switches on fridge and entry doors, can generate a profile of the user's lifestyle. Deviations from the normal profile can result in an alert being generated.

Correlations between both health and lifestyle strategies have not been conducted and this trial provides this opportunity.

Within the realms of this research study the lifestyle monitoring system will not be utilising the 'alert' system. It will purely be in a data gathering mode.

Status Flow

~Jan 2017 – ~Jun 2018 · 17 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jun 2018 – ~Jan 2021 · 31 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jan 2021 – ~Jul 2024 · 42 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jul 2024 – ~Sep 2024 · 2 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Sep 2024 – present · 19 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jan 2026 – present · 3 months · monthly snapshotCompleted

Change History

6 versions recorded
  1. Jan 2026 — Present [monthly]

    Completed NA

  2. Sep 2024 — Present [monthly]

    Completed NA

  3. Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]

    Completed NA

  4. Jan 2021 — Jul 2024 [monthly]

    Completed NA

  5. Jun 2018 — Jan 2021 [monthly]

    Completed NA

Show 1 earlier version
  1. Jan 2017 — Jun 2018 [monthly]

    Completed NA

    First recorded

Nov 2005

Trial started

Per CT.gov start date — pre-dates our first snapshot

Eligibility Summary

No eligibility information available.

Contact Information

Sponsor contact:
  • Anchor Trust
  • Barnsley Hospital
  • Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, UK
  • Imperial College London
  • Thomas Pocklington Trust
  • Tunstall
  • University College, London
  • University of Dundee
Data source: Barnsley Hospital

For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .

Study Locations