KidneYou is a medical device designed to deliver digital therapy (DT) to patients. The DT, as
part of Digital Health, utilizes high quality digital technologies to stimulate lifestyle
changes in patients. KidneYou has been set up to improve the commitment of patients in
following therapeutic directives (i.e. nutritional programs, daily/weekly physical
activities) to manage their chronic diseases like CKD. Moreover, KidneYou can improve
patient's awareness about his/her disease (mindfulness) so as to increase the individual
human ability to be fully present at the ongoing disease's condition and react to it in
active and positive manner.
The aim of this study is to determine whether the medical device KidneYou, randomly assigned
to CKD patients (G3b/G4 categories; A1/A2 categories), can improve the CKD-related patient's
health conditions by positive changes in the subject's lifestyle (i.e., healthy eating,
physical activity participation) and by means of cumulative stress reduction (i.e.,
mindfulness program) originating from the underlying chronic disease and from diagnosis and
treatment interventions necessary to manage it. Some lifestyle programs (i.e., nutrition and
physical exercises) will be delivered to both randomized groups by different modalities (i.e.
with/without KidneYou), while other programs (i.e., mindfulness) will only be accessible to
KidneYou users, requiring a technology support for the multimedia content to be
self-administered daily by the App. This innovative method avoids a daily face-to-face
intervention administered by healthcare professionals for mental health treatments. Broadly
speaking, it is expected that KidneYou may improve a patient's adherence to clinical advices
and consequently patient's health condition in users compared to non-users. The enrolled
subjects will be randomly assigned to one of the two treatment arms according to a
parallel-group design. Subjects included in Group A (intervention group) will be provided
with KidneYou, while patients in Group B (non-equivalent group) will be used as control. The
study will enrol 210 subjects, both genders, aged ≥18 years, to obtain 190 overall valuable
subjects (95 each group). The recruitment period will last 12 months.
For each patient the treatment will last 3 consecutive months (12 weeks) during which
lifestyle changes will be implemented with/without KidneYou. At the end of this period the
lifestyle program will be terminated, followed by a follow-up visit after 1 further month (16
weeks). The follow-up visit will be used to observe the sustained effects on patient's health
30 days after termination of the change lifestyle programs administered to patients with and
without KidneYou.
At the beginning of the study, patients will be evaluated for their stress level by means of
the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) by Cohen (Cohen, 1983). Specifically, it will be used the
Italian translation of PSS-10, which is a 10-item questionnaire designed to tap how
unpredictable, uncontrollable, and overloaded respondents find their lives. To customize the
stress measurement to the population age range expected in this study, according to Norm
Table for the PSS 10-item inventory, a cut-off of 12 points was chosen. Therefore, all
subjects with a score >12 in the PSS questionnaire delivered at the first study visit (V0),
will be considered to have a higher stress level above normal and to have one of the major
inclusion criteria.
Each subject will undergo 4 (four) visits and will be examined according to the following
schedule:
- - V1 - 6 weeks after baseline (Day 42±2)
- V2 - 12 weeks after baseline (Day 84±2.
End of lifestyle program administration)
- - V3 - 4 weeks after V2 (Day 112±4.
Follow-up visit and End of Study [EOS] visit)
Benefit/Risk Assessment Benefits for patients resulting from study implementation are the
simultaneous application of the three non-pharmacological programs for improving the health
of CKD patients. The expected results are that the simultaneous use of the three programs
will allow greater improvements than those achieved so far with the separate use of programs.
Instead of the experimental evidence published so far, the present study intends to measure
the objective benefits rather than the perceived ones by CKD patients. For this, the
composite primary objective/endpoint consists of easily measurable objective markers.
Improvements are expected in both treatment groups, as food and physical programs will also
be implemented in the control (KidneYou non-users) group. However, in the investigational
group (KidneYou users) it is assumed to achieve higher benefits, thanks to the possibility to
offer, by means of the App software, the third psychological program (mindfulness) consisting
of multimedia contents. The higher expected benefits in the investigational group are
justified by the greater attractiveness of the App compared to paper diary in the control
group, with a consequent increase in compliance and effectiveness in KidneYou users.
Possible risks that can be anticipated in this specific study population may be related to
clinical events emerging from adherence to at least one of the three non-pharmacological
programs, such as hypoglycemia, nausea, vomiting, gastrointestinal discomfort, physical
accidents during exercises, hypertensive crises, obsessive feeling about exercise and food
intake, anxiety/guilt when not reaching assigned exercise or food intake goals, interferences
with subject's daily activities and/or social life, neuroses about individual body image or
any other adverse experience.
Primary Objective.
- - To improve the quality and quantity of dietary intake in patients using KidneYou compared
to patients unprovided with the App after 3 months of customized Nutritional Program (NP).
OR.
- - To increase energy expenditure in patients using KidneYou compared to patients unprovided
with KidneYou after 3 months of customized Physical Activity Program (PA).
OR.
- - To relieve the stress related to the underlying CKD condition in patients using KidneYou
compared to patients unprovided with KidneYou after 3 months of study.
Secondary Objectves. 1. To help patients to achieve two or more of the above-mentioned objectives.
2. To describe each primary objective achieved in each randomized group.
3. To stratify the primary objective results by G3b and G4 category of CKD classification. 4. To stratify the primary objective results by A1 and A2 category of CKD classification.
5. To assess the degree of azoturia reduction (g/24h) in each treatment group during the
study.
6. To assess differences in azoturia reduction (g/24h) between the two randomized groups
during the study.
7. To assess the degree of physical function improvements in each treatment group during
the 6-MWT.
8. To assess differences in physical function improvements between the two randomized
groups during the study.
9. To assess the degree of physical activity increase (minutes) in each treatment group
during the study.
10. To assess the degree of stress reduction (Perceived Stress Scale [PSS] of Cohen) in each
treatment group during the study.
11. To assess differences of stress reduction (Perceived Stress Scale [PSS] of Cohen)
between the two randomized groups during the study.
12. To detect the acceptability level in KidneYou users.
Safety 13. To describe the safety profile in the two treatment groups.
Primary Endpoints.
- - To evaluate the achievement of a mean reduction of at least 10% of azoturia (g/24h) in
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) KidneYou users exposed to a 3-month Nutritional Program (NP)
compared to CKD KidneYou non-users exposed to the same 3-month NP.
OR.
- - To evaluate the achievement of a mean increase of at least 15% of distance (meters in the
6-MWT) in CKD KidneYou users exposed to a 3-month PA Program compared to CKD KidneYou
non-users exposed to the same 3-month PA Program.
OR.
- - To evaluate the achievement of a mean decrease of at least 10% of perceived stress
(according to the Perceived Stress Scale [PSS] of Cohen) in CKD KidneYou users exposed to a
3-month Mindfulness Program (MP) compared to CKD KidneYou nonusers and non-exposed to the
same MP.
Safety Endpoint To assess the rate of adverse events, adverse device effects, abnormality of
laboratory. Statistical Hypotheses This study is designed to test the null hypothesis that the percentage
'success' (intended as primary endpoint achievement) in KidneYou non-users is equal to the
percentage 'success' in KidneYou users. The alternative hypothesis is that the percentage
'success' in KidneYou nonusers is different from the percentage 'success' in KidneYou users.
Sample Size Determination The sample size is estimated to provide statistical power for the
primary endpoint. The sample size calculation is based on the combination of expected
proportion of success in the control group and expected delta (Δ) of success in the
experimental group.
With a significance level α equal to 0.05 and a power equal to 80%, a sample size of 190
subjects (95 per group) is required to detect as significant, if any, a success delta in
favor of the experimental group equal to 20% (under the hypothesis of success rate of 40% in
the control group and success rate of 60% in the experimental group).
Data Quality Assurance All participant data relating to the study will be recorded on eCRF
unless transmitted to the sponsor or designee electronically (e.g., laboratory data). The
investigator is responsible for verifying that data entries are accurate and correct by
electronically signing the eCRF.
The investigator must permit study-related monitoring, audits, Institutional Review
Board/Ethic Committee review, and regulatory agency inspections and provide direct access to
source data documents.
The sponsor or designee is responsible for the data management of this study including
quality checking of the data.
Study monitors will perform ongoing source data verification to confirm that data entered
into the eCRF by authorised site personnel are accurate, complete, and verifiable from source
documents; that the safety and rights of participants are being protected; and that the study
is being conducted in accordance with the currently approved protocol and any other study
agreements, ICH (International Conference on Harmonization) GCP (Good Clinical Practice), and
all applicable regulatory requirements.