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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: Oct 25, 2023
Date Accepted: Sep 12, 2024

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Patients’ and Clinicians’ Experiences Using a Real-Time Remote Monitoring System for Chemotherapy Symptom Management (ASyMS): Qualitative Study

McCann L, Lewis L, Oduntan O, Harris J, Darley A, Berg G, Lubowitzki S, Cheevers K, Miller M, Armes J, Ream E, Fox P, Furlong E, Gaiger A, Kotronoulas G, Patiraki E, Katsaragakis S, McCrone P, Miaskowski C, Cardone A, Orr D, Flowerday A, Skene S, Moore M, De Souza N, Kearney N, Donnan P, Maguire R

Patients’ and Clinicians’ Experiences Using a Real-Time Remote Monitoring System for Chemotherapy Symptom Management (ASyMS): Qualitative Study

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e53834

DOI: 10.2196/53834

PMID: 39626227

PMCID: 11653047

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Facilitator of change: Patients’ and clinicians’ experiences using ASyMS, a real-time remote monitoring system for chemotherapy symptom management

  • Lisa McCann; 
  • Liane Lewis; 
  • Olubukola Oduntan; 
  • Jenny Harris; 
  • Andrew Darley; 
  • Geir Berg; 
  • Simone Lubowitzki; 
  • Katy Cheevers; 
  • Morven Miller; 
  • Jo Armes; 
  • Emma Ream; 
  • Patricia Fox; 
  • Eileen Furlong; 
  • Alexander Gaiger; 
  • Grigorios Kotronoulas; 
  • Elisabeth Patiraki; 
  • Stylianos Katsaragakis; 
  • Paul McCrone; 
  • Christine Miaskowski; 
  • Antonella Cardone; 
  • Dawn Orr; 
  • Adrian Flowerday; 
  • Simon Skene; 
  • Margaret Moore; 
  • Nicosha De Souza; 
  • Nora Kearney; 
  • Peter Donnan; 
  • Roma Maguire

ABSTRACT

Background:

Patients receiving chemotherapy require ongoing symptom monitoring and management to optimize their outcomes. In recent years, digital remote monitoring interventions have emerged to provide enhanced cancer care delivery experiences to patients and clinicians. However, patients and clinicians evaluations of these technologies are rare. Therefore, we evaluated one such intervention - the Advanced Symptom Management System (ASyMS) – after its scaled deployment in five European countries in the eSMART trial.

Objective:

In this study both patients’ and clinicians’ experiences using ASyMS during chemotherapy were explored to understand ASyMS’ impact on patients’ experiences, clinical practice, and supportive care delivery.

Objective:

In this study both patients’ and clinicians’ experiences using ASyMS during chemotherapy were explored to understand ASyMS’ impact on patients’ experiences, clinical practice, and supportive care delivery.

Methods:

For this analysis, semi-structured 1:1 interviews with 29 patients with breast, colorectal and hematological cancers and 18 clinicians from Austria, Greece, Ireland, Norway and United Kingdom were conducted. Interviews focused on patients’ and clinicians’ experiences of using ASyMS; care organization and changes in practice following the introduction of ASyMS; perceived changes in care associated with the use of ASyMS, and its potential for future integration into routine chemotherapy care pathways.

Results:

Thematic analysis identified several themes that describe patients’ and clinicians’ experiences using ASyMS. One central orienting theme - ASyMS as a facilitator of change – was supported by five key themes: reassurance from human and technology monitoring; enhanced communications and relationships through human and technology monitoring; knowing what is “normal” and what is to be expected through human and technology monitoring; enhancing cancer care experiences through human and technology monitoring; and informing future cancer care through human and technology monitoring.

Conclusions:

This study is the first to evaluate both patients’ and clinicians’ experiences using a digital health intervention across five countries. Experiences with ASyMS were positive from both patients’ and clinicians’ perspectives. This study demonstrates the acceptability, value, and importance of real-time remote monitoring systems to provide supportive care for patients undergoing chemotherapy and clinicians providing care. Clinical Trial: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT02356081


 Citation

Please cite as:

McCann L, Lewis L, Oduntan O, Harris J, Darley A, Berg G, Lubowitzki S, Cheevers K, Miller M, Armes J, Ream E, Fox P, Furlong E, Gaiger A, Kotronoulas G, Patiraki E, Katsaragakis S, McCrone P, Miaskowski C, Cardone A, Orr D, Flowerday A, Skene S, Moore M, De Souza N, Kearney N, Donnan P, Maguire R

Patients’ and Clinicians’ Experiences Using a Real-Time Remote Monitoring System for Chemotherapy Symptom Management (ASyMS): Qualitative Study

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e53834

DOI: 10.2196/53834

PMID: 39626227

PMCID: 11653047

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