ArthritisPower® Data Shows that Patient Engagement with Digital Tools Enhances Understanding of Arthritis – Welcomed News Amidst Worldwide Pandemic Forcing Digital Engagement

PRESS RELEASE

ArthritisPower® Data Shows that Patient Engagement with Digital Tools Enhances Understanding of Arthritis – Welcomed News Amidst Worldwide Pandemic Forcing Digital Engagement

PUBLISHED 6/3/20
JESSICA DAITCH – GHLF STAFF

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE  

MEDIA CONTACT

Jessica Daitch

Phone: 917-816-6712

Email: [email protected]

CreakyJoints® Research at the European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) European Rheumatology E-Congress 2020 Focuses on Disease Management Strategies

UPPER NYACK, NY (June 3, 2020) – Today CreakyJoints®, the digital patient community for people with all forms of arthritis and part of the Global Healthy Living Foundation, is presenting data that demonstrate how integrating digital tools into patients’ arthritis management strategies can improve understanding of arthritis. These data were shared during the European E-Congress of Rheumatology 2020, presented virtually by the European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) starting June 3. The patient-centered research, conducted prior to the COVID-19 outbreak, illuminates paths forward for patients entering or already in their new digital realities.

“Smartphones, wearables, and social media are ubiquitous in our daily lives and we are increasingly comfortable using these tools to help us communicate with each other and access information, including about our own health,” said W. Benjamin Nowell, PhD, study author, Director of Patient-Centered Research at CreakyJoints, and principal investigator of ArthritisPower. “The data we are presenting at European E-Congress of Rheumatology 2020 examines how digital technology can be integrated into arthritis management and how it can be used to conduct arthritis research. We wanted to learn more about the feasibility of patients using a smartphone app and commercial grade fitness tracker to share daily data over an extended period of time, as well as gain insight into which aspects of their condition patients prefer to track digitally. Our findings help inform future clinical trials and disease management strategies, and they come at the right time as we all adjust to our lives in a COVID-19 world.”

In the poster titled, “Which Patient-Reported Outcomes Do Rheumatology Patients Find Important to Track Digitally? A Real-World Longitudinal Study in ArthritisPower,” patients with rheumatic disease used the smartphone app of the ArthritisPower registry to choose patient reported outcomes (PROs) that they felt were important to track for their condition. Participants were asked to make an initial selection at baseline, and then reviewed their selections at the end of months 1, 2, and 3, when they were given the option to either continue tracking the same symptoms or to change to different measures. A total of 140 participants completed all four timepoints of the study. In order of priority, the top 5 symptoms ranked by participants across rheumatic conditions as most important for tracking were fatigue, physical function, pain intensity, pain interference and duration of morning joint stiffness.

“Not only did this study tell us about the symptoms rheumatic disease patients feel are most important to track, we saw good participation across the study period, meaning that respondents felt comfortable using the ArthritisPower app to participate in longitudinal research,” added Dr. Nowell. “This is especially important as these and other instruments will be pivotal for successful telehealth integration into patients’ and healthcare providers’ lives.”

Smart Devices Aid in Data Collection

The Digital Tracking of Arthritis Longitudinally (DIGITAL) study is evaluating the use of electronically captured patient-reported outcomes (ePRO) and passive data collection from a Fitbit device to identify disease worsening in a real-world study of participants with rheumatoid arthritis. In the poster titled, “Participant engagement in an ArthritisPower real-world study to capture smartwatch and patient-reported outcome data among rheumatoid arthritis patients,” researchers assessed participants’ adherence (30 days, n=170) to required daily digital tasks, such as wearing and syncing a smartwatch, and answering questions on a smartphone app. Of the digital tasks in the main study, participants were most adherent at wearing and syncing the smartwatch, with 93% wearing it at least 80% of the time. Participants were least adherent at completing daily PRO assessments with 70% of participants providing them more than 70% of the time. Overall, 67% of participants achieved composite compliance, meaning that they provided more than 70% of the data across all data types.

Another poster stemming from the DIGITAL study, “Using self-reported outcomes to detect new-onset flare in a real-world study of participants with rheumatoid arthritis – Interim results from the Digital Tracking of Arthritis Longitudinally (DIGITAL) study,” evaluated whether patient-reported new-onset flares could be detected using a classification model applied to data collected from participants with rheumatoid arthritis in a digital real-world study. The training data included 58 new-onset flares in 50 unique participants to build a logistic regression model that was applied to test data that included 64 flare outcomes in 52 unique participants. The best fit model that was able to correctly classify new-onset flare 78% of the time included the single-item patient-reported difficulty in participating in work, family life and social events from the OMERACT RA FLARE instrument and scores from the daily pain numeric rating scale. The DIGITAL study and top PROs study were supported by Eli Lilly and Company.

“What we hope to learn from the DIGITAL study and subsequent confirmatory studies is that passive activity data could be used as an objective measure of pain,” stated Jeffrey R. Curtis, MD, MS, MPH, Harbert – Ball Professor of Medicine, Division of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology, and Director, UAB Arthritis Clinical Intervention Program (ACIP) at University of Alabama at Birmingham. “Beyond research, similar approaches could be used for patient monitoring in clinical care if we can demonstrate that certain passive measures from wearables are connected to changes in disease activity.”

CreakyJoints is a digital community for millions of arthritis patients and caregivers worldwide who seek education, support, advocacy, and patient-centered research. We represent patients through our popular social media channels, our website www.CreakyJoints.org, and the 50-State Network, which includes more than 1,700 trained volunteer patient, caregiver and healthcare activists.

As part of the Global Healthy Living Foundation, CreakyJoints also has a patient-reported outcomes registry called ArthritisPower® (ArthritisPower.org) with nearly 30,000 consented arthritis patients who track their disease while volunteering to participate in longitudinal and observational research. CreakyJoints also publishes the popular “Raising the Voice of Patients” series, which are downloadable patient-centered educational and navigational tools for managing chronic illness. It also hosts PainSpot (PainSpot.org), a digital risk assessment tool for musculoskeletal conditions and injuries. For more information and to become a member (for free), visit www.CreakyJoints.org.

Media Contact: Jessica Daitch | Phone: 917-816-6712 | Email: [email protected]

Find us online:
CreakyJoints: CreakyJoints.org
CreakyJoints Español: CJES.org
CreakyJoints Australia: CreakyJoints.org.au
Global Healthy Living Foundation: ghlf.org
Facebook: facebook.com/CreakyJoints & facebook.com/GlobalHealthyLivingFoundation
Twitter: @GHLForg, @CreakyJoints, #CreakyChats
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LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/ghlf

About Global Healthy Living Foundation
The Global Healthy Living Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization whose mission is to improve the quality of life for people with chronic illnesses (such as arthritis, osteoporosis, migraine, psoriasis, inflammatory bowel disease, and cardiovascular disease) by advocating for improved access to health care at the community, state, and federal levels, and amplifying education and awareness e!orts within its social media framework. GHLF is also a staunch advocate for vaccines. The Global Healthy Living Foundation is the parent organization of CreakyJoints®, the digital community for millions of arthritis patients and caregivers worldwide who seek education, support, activism, and patient-centered research through our ArthritisPower® (ArthritisPower.org) Research Registry. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, GHLF started a Patient Support Program, informed by a patient council made up of people living with a wide range of chronic illnesses, that now serves more than 30,000 people. Via CreakyJoints, GHLF also hosts PainSpot (PainSpot.org), a digital risk-assessment tool for musculoskeletal conditions and injuries, and eRheum (eRheum.org), for telehealth and virtual-care support. Visit ghlf.org for more information.

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