Personalized Smartphone-Enabled Assessment of Blood Pressure and Its Treatment During the SARS-CoV-2 COVID-19 Pandemic in Patients From the CURE-19 Study: Longitudinal Observational Study.

Publication date: Dec 03, 2024

The use of digital interventions by patients for remote monitoring and management of health and disease is increasing. This observational study examined the feasibility, use, and safety of a digital smartphone app for routine monitoring of blood pressure (BP), medication, and symptoms of COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic. The objective of this study was to deploy and test electronic data recording using a smartphone app developed for routine monitoring of BP in patients with primary hypertension. We tested the app for ease of data entry in BP management and tracking symptoms of new-onset COVID-19 to determine if participants found this app approach useful and sustainable. This remote, decentralized, 12-week, prospective, observational study was conducted in a community setting within the United States. Participants were approached and recruited from affiliated sites where they were enrolled in an ongoing remote decentralized study (CURE-19) of participants experiencing the COVID-19 pandemic. Potential participants were asked to complete a digital screener to determine eligibility and given informed consent forms to read and consent to using the Curebase digital platform. Following enrollment, participants downloaded the digital app to their smartphones for all data collection. Participants recorded daily BP, associated medication use, and emergent symptoms associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection. In addition, usability (adherence, acceptability, and user experience) was assessed using standard survey questions. Adverse events were collected based on participant self-report. Compliance and engagement were determined from user data entry rates. Feasibility and participant feedback were assessed upon study completion using the User Experience Questionnaire. Of the 389 participants who enrolled in and completed the study, 380 (98%) participants downloaded and entered BP routines in week 1. App engagement remained high; 239 (62. 9%) of the 380 participants remained in the study for the full 12-week observation period, and 201 (84. 1%) of the 239 participants entered full BP routines into the digital app 80% or more of the time. The smartphone app scored an overall positive evaluation as assessed by the User Experience Questionnaire and was benchmarked as “excellent” for domains of perspicuity, efficiency, and dependability and “above average” for domains of attractiveness and stimulation. Highly adherent participants with hypertension demonstrated well-controlled BP, with no significant changes in average systolic or diastolic BP between week 1 and week 12 (all P>. 05). Participants were able to record BP medications and symptoms of SARS-CoV-2 infection. No adverse events attributable to the use of the smartphone app were reported during the observational period. The high retention, engagement and acceptability and positive feedback in this study demonstrates that routine monitoring of BP and medications using a smartphone app is feasible for patients with hypertension in a community setting. Remote monitoring of BP and data collection could be coupled with hypertensive medication in a combination product (drug+digital) for precision management of hypertension.

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Concepts Keywords
Bp Adult
Covid Aged
Curebase app
Hypertension blood pressure
Smartphones Blood Pressure Determination
community
COVID-19
COVID-19
deployment
diastolic
digital diary
digital intervention
feasibility
Feasibility Studies
Female
Humans
Hypertension
hypertension
Longitudinal Studies
Male
management
medication
Middle Aged
Mobile Applications
mobile phone
monitoring
observational study
Pandemics
Prospective Studies
remote monitoring
safety
SARS-CoV-2
SARS-CoV-2
Smartphone
smartphone app
symptoms
systolic
United States
use
utilization

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease IDO blood
disease MESH COVID-19 Pandemic
disease MESH primary hypertension
pathway REACTOME SARS-CoV-2 Infection
disease MESH hypertension
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease IDO intervention
disease MESH premature death
disease MESH infection
disease MESH adverse drug reactions
disease IDO symptom
disease IDO process
disease IDO history
drug DRUGBANK Spinosad
drug DRUGBANK Methyltestosterone
disease MESH pneumonia
disease IDO disposition

Original Article

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