Remote Observational Research for Multiple Sclerosis: A Natural Experiment

Prospective, deeply phenotyped research cohorts monitoring individuals with chronic neurologic conditions, such as multiple sclerosis (MS), depend on continued participant engagement. The COVID-19 pandemic restricted in-clinic research activities, threatening this longitudinal engagement, but also f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurology : neuroimmunology & neuroinflammation 2023-03, Vol.10 (2)
Hauptverfasser: Bove, Riley, Poole, Shane, Cuneo, Richard, Gupta, Sasha, Sabatino, Joseph, Harms, Meagan, Cooper, Tifffany, Rowles, William, Miller, Nicolette, Gomez, Refujia, Lincoln, Robin, McPolin, Kira, Powers, Kyra, Santaniello, Adam, Renschen, Adam, Bevan, Carolyn J., Gelfand, Jeffrey M., Goodin, Douglas S., Guo, Chu-Yueh, Romeo, Andrew R., Hauser, Stephen L., Campbell Cree, Bruce Anthony
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Prospective, deeply phenotyped research cohorts monitoring individuals with chronic neurologic conditions, such as multiple sclerosis (MS), depend on continued participant engagement. The COVID-19 pandemic restricted in-clinic research activities, threatening this longitudinal engagement, but also forced adoption of televideo-enabled care. This offered a natural experiment in which to analyze key dimensions of remote research: (1) comparison of remote vs in-clinic visit costs from multiple perspectives and (2) comparison of the remote with in-clinic measures in cross-sectional and longitudinal disability evaluations. Between March 2020 and December 2021, 207 MS cohort participants underwent hybrid in-clinic and virtual research visits; 96 contributed 100 "matched visits," that is, in-clinic (Neurostatus-Expanded Disability Status Scale [NS-EDSS]) and remote (televideo-enabled EDSS [tele-EDSS]; electronic patient-reported EDSS [ePR-EDSS]) evaluations. Clinical, demographic, and socioeconomic characteristics of participants were collected. The costs of remote visits were lower than in-clinic visits for research investigators (facilities, personnel, parking, participant compensation) but also for participants (travel, caregiver time) and carbon footprint ( < 0.05 for each). Median cohort EDSS was similar between the 3 modalities (NS-EDSS: 2, tele-EDSS: 1.5, ePR-EDSS: 2, range 0.6.5); the remote evaluations were each noninferior to the NS-EDSS within ±0.5 EDSS point (TOST for noninferiority, < 0.01 for each). Furthermore, year to year, the % of participants with worsening/stable/improved EDSS scores was similar, whether each annual evaluation used NS-EDSS or whether it switched from NS-EDSS to tele-EDSS. Altogether, the current findings suggest that remote evaluations can reduce the costs of research participation for patients, while providing a reasonable evaluation of disability trajectory longitudinally. This could inform the design of remote research that is more inclusive of diverse participants.
ISSN:2332-7812
2332-7812
DOI:10.1212/NXI.0000000000200070