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The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation ; 40(4, Supplement):S146, 2021.
Article in English | ScienceDirect | ID: covidwho-1141797

ABSTRACT

Purpose The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the need to develop remote monitoring of graft function in lung transplant (LT) recipients. While home spirometry has been used previously in LT, long-term engagement has been poor. We aimed to improve engagement and allow efficient data and symptom collection using Bluetooth enabled home spirometers coupled with a digital chatbot. Methods We implemented an automated, chat-based mobile health intervention via text message or email paired with Bluetooth-enabled hand-held spirometers. The chatbot engaged LT recipients weekly in a personalized, automated chat with symptom assessment, education modules, and spirometer data collection. Clinical team members received automatic notification of concerning symptoms or FEV1 declines of >10%. The correlation between home spirometry FEV1 values and lab-based values were assessed with Pearson's coefficient. Results We mailed home spirometers to 424 patients. Between 5/4/2020 and 10/21/2020, 311 patients enrolled in the automated chat and, of these, 273 patients submitted ≥1 FEV1 measure, (median 13;IQR 6-23) over 24 weeks. The largest drop in FEV1 engagement came after the first week in each patient's chat experience;65% of those that submitted an FEV1 at baseline entered a value at week one and 72% at week two. However, after this initial decline, engagement remained stable through 24 weeks (57-72%, Figure 1.A). Home spirometry FEV1 correlated closely with in-lab spirometry (rho = 0.94) (Figure 1.B) Conclusion

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