Clinical Perspectives on Using Remote Measurement Technology in Assessing Epilepsy, Multiple Sclerosis, and Depression: Delphi Study

Author:

Andrews Jacob AORCID,Craven Michael PORCID,Guo BoliangORCID,Weyer JaniceORCID,Lees SimonORCID,Zormpas Spyridon IORCID,Thorpe Sarah EORCID,Devonshire JulieORCID,San Antonio-Arce VictoriaORCID,Whitehouse William PORCID,Julie JessicaORCID,Malins SamORCID,Hammers AlexanderORCID,Reif AndreasORCID,Ruhe Henricus GORCID,Durbano FedericoORCID,Barlati StefanoORCID,Sen ArjuneORCID,Frederiksen Jette LORCID,Martinelli AlessandraORCID,Callen AntonioORCID,Torras-Borrell JoanORCID,Berrocal-Izquierdo NuriaORCID,Zabalza AnaORCID,Morriss RichardORCID,Hollis ChrisORCID,

Abstract

BackgroundMultiple sclerosis (MS), epilepsy, and depression are chronic central nervous system conditions in which remote measurement technology (RMT) may offer benefits compared with usual assessment. We previously worked with clinicians, patients, and researchers to develop 13 use cases for RMT: 5 in epilepsy (seizure alert, seizure counting, risk scoring, triage support, and trend analysis), 3 in MS (detecting silent progression, detecting depression in MS, and donating data to a biobank), and 5 in depression (detecting trends, reviewing treatment, self-management, comorbid monitoring, and carer alert).ObjectiveIn this study, we aimed to evaluate the use cases and related implementation issues with an expert panel of clinicians external to our project consortium.MethodsWe used a Delphi exercise to validate the use cases and suggest a prioritization among them and to ascertain the importance of a variety of implementation issues related to RMT. The expert panel included clinicians from across Europe who were external to the project consortium. The study had 2 survey rounds (n=23 and n=17) and a follow-up interview round (n=9). Data were analyzed for consensus between participants and for stability between survey rounds. The interviews explored the reasons for answers given in the survey.ResultsThe findings showed high stability between rounds on questions related to specific use cases but lower stability on questions relating to wider issues around the implementation of RMT. Overall, questions on wider issues also had less consensus. All 5 use cases for epilepsy (seizure alert, seizure counting, risk scoring, triage support, and trend analysis) were considered beneficial, with consensus among participants above the a priori threshold for most questions, although use case 3 (risk scoring) was considered less likely to facilitate or catalyze care. There was very little consensus on the benefits of the use cases in MS, although this may have resulted from a higher dropout rate of MS clinicians (50%). Participants agreed that there would be benefits for all 5 of the depression use cases, although fewer questions on use case 4 (triage support) reached consensus agreement than for depression use cases 1 (detecting trends), 2 (reviewing treatment), 3 (self-management), and 5 (carer alert). The qualitative analysis revealed further insights into each use case and generated 8 themes on practical issues related to implementation.ConclusionsOverall, these findings inform the prioritization of use cases for RMT that could be developed in future work, which may include clinical trials, cost-effectiveness studies, and the commercial development of RMT products and services. Priorities for further development include the use of RMT to provide more accurate records of symptoms and treatment response than is currently possible and to provide data that could help inform patient triage and generate timely alerts for patients and carers.

Publisher

JMIR Publications Inc.

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