Objective:
To evaluate the effectiveness of a team-based connected health model compared to conventional in-person care for patients with atopic dermatitis (AD).
Approach:
- Study Design: A pragmatic randomized clinical equivalence trial involving 300 pediatric and adult patients with physician-diagnosed AD from 8 outpatient dermatology clinics in California.
- Intervention: Participants were randomly assigned to receive either asynchronous online care through a connected health platform or conventional in-person care.
- Outcomes: Primary outcome was change in the Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI) over 12 months; secondary outcomes included changes in the Patient-Oriented Eczema Measure (POEM) and validated Investigator Global Assessment (vIGA).
Key Findings:
- The connected health model met criteria for equivalence on the primary outcome, with improvements in EASI comparable to in-person care.
- Improvements in patient-reported symptoms (POEM) and physician-assessed disease severity (vIGA) also met equivalence criteria.
- Safety outcomes were comparable between groups, with serious adverse events being uncommon and unrelated to interventions.
- Patients in the connected health model had substantially lower use of in-person specialty care.
Interpretation:
Limitations:
- Baseline disease severity was relatively low, limiting generalizability to more severe AD cases.
- Participation required internet access and digital literacy, potentially limiting applicability in certain populations.
- Part of the study was conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic, which may have influenced telemedicine use.
Conclusion:
Sources:
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