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Featured researches published by Emamuzo Otobo.


JMIR Research Protocols | 2015

Impact of the Mobile HealthPROMISE Platform on the Quality of Care and Quality of Life in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Study Protocol of a Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial

Ashish Atreja; Sameer Khan; Jason Rogers; Emamuzo Otobo; Nishant P Patel; Thomas A. Ullman; Jean Fred Colombel; Shirley M. Moore; Bruce E. Sands

Background Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic condition of the bowel that affects over 1 million people in the United States. The recurring nature of disease makes IBD patients ideal candidates for patient-engaged care that is centered on enhanced self-management and improved doctor-patient communication. In IBD, optimal approaches to management vary for patients with different phenotypes and extent of disease and past surgical history. Hence, a single quality metric cannot define a heterogeneous disease such as IBD, unlike hypertension and diabetes. A more comprehensive assessment may be provided by complementing traditional quality metrics with measures of the patient’s quality of life (QOL) through an application like HealthPROMISE. Objective The objective of this pragmatic randomized controlled trial is to determine the impact of the HealthPROMISE app in improving outcomes (quality of care [QOC], QOL, patient adherence, disease control, and resource utilization) as compared to a patient education app. Our hypothesis is that a patient-centric self-monitoring and collaborative decision support platform will lead to sustainable improvement in overall QOL for IBD patients. Methods Participants will be recruited during face-to-face visits and randomized to either an interventional (ie, HealthPROMISE) or control (ie, education app). Patients in the HealthPROMISE arm will be able to update their information and receive disease summary, quality metrics, and a graph showing the trend of QOL (SIBDQ) scores and resource utilization over time. Providers will use the data for collaborative decision making and quality improvement interventions at the point of care. Patients in the control arm will enter data at baseline, during office visits, and at the end of the study but will not receive any decision support (trend of QOL, alert, or dashboard views). Results Enrollment in the trial will be starting in first quarter of 2015. It is intended that up to 300 patients with IBD will be recruited into the study (with 1:1 allocation ratio). The primary endpoint is number of quality indicators met in HealthPROMISE versus control arm. Secondary endpoints include decrease in number of emergency visits due to IBD, decrease in number of hospitalization due to IBD, change in generic QOL score from baseline, proportion of patients in each group who meet all eligible outpatient quality metrics, and proportion of patients in disease control in each group. In addition, we plan to conduct protocol analysis of intervention patients with adequate HealthPROMISE utilization (more than 6 log-ins with data entry from week 0 through week 52) achieving above mentioned primary and secondary endpoints. Conclusions HealthPROMISE is a unique cloud-based patient-reported outcome (PRO) and decision support tool that empowers both patients and providers. Patients track their QOL and symptoms, and providers can use the visual data in real time (integrated with electronic health records [EHRs]) to provide better care to their entire patient population. Using pragmatic trial design, we hope to show that IBD patients who participate in their own care and share in decision making have appreciably improved outcomes when compared to patients who do not. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02322307; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02322307 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6W8PoYThr).


Current Gastroenterology Reports | 2018

Remote Patient Monitoring in IBD: Current State and Future Directions

Ashish Atreja; Emamuzo Otobo; Karthik Ramireddy; Allyssa Deorocki

Purpose of ReviewMobile apps are now increasingly used in conjunction with telemedicine and wearable devices to support remote patient monitoring (RPM). The goal of this paper is to review the available evidence and assess the scope of RPM integration into standard practices for care and management of chronic disease in general and, more specifically, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).Recent FindingsRPM has been associated with improvements in health outcomes and indicators across a broad range of chronic diseases. However, there is limited data on the effectiveness of RPM in IBD care. From the emerging literature and body of research, we found promising results about the feasibility of integrating RPM in IBD care and RPM’s capacity to support IBD improvement in key process and outcome metrics.SummaryConcerns regarding privacy and provider acceptability have limited the mass integration of RPM to date. However, with the healthcare industry’s move toward value-based population care and the advent of novel payment models for RPM reimbursement, the adoption of RPM into standard IBD care practices will likely increase as the technology continues to improve and become a mainstream tool for healthcare delivery in the near future.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2018

USE OF ELECTRONIC PATIENT REPORTED OUTCOMES AND AUTOMATED DEVICES FOR HEART FAILURE DISEASE MANAGEMENT

Emamuzo Otobo; Ashish Atreja; Robert Freeman; Jason Rogers; Farah Fasihuddin; Allyssa Deorocki; Rivelle Zlatopolsky; Marni Goldstein; Jennifer Ullman; Sean Pinney


Journal of Crohns & Colitis | 2018

DOP069 Improved quality of care and quality of life for IBD patients using mobile based remote monitoring platform: A randomised control trial

Ashish Atreja; Emamuzo Otobo; Eva Szigethy; H Shroff; Helena L. Chang; Laurie Keefer; Jason Rogers; Thomas A. Ullman; James F. Marion; Benjamin L. Cohen; E. Maser; Steven H. Itzkowitz; J.-F. Colombel; Bruce E. Sands


Iproceedings | 2018

Reinventing Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) Clinical Trial Recruitment Using Novel Digital Medicine Tools

Emamuzo Otobo; Christopher Park; Jason Rogers; Farah Fasihuddin; Shashank Garg; Chloe Yang; Zahin Roja; Vishu Chandrasekhar; Kritika Singh; Vinod Kumar; Divya Madisetty; Harkirat Dhillon; Ashish Atreja


Gastroenterology | 2018

P057 IMPROVED QUALITY OF CARE AND QUALITY OF LIFE FOR IBD PATIENTS USING MOBILE BASED REMOTE MONITORING PLATFORM: A RANDOMIZED CONTROL TRIAL

Ashish Atreja; Emamuzo Otobo; Eva Szigethy; Akshay Kohli; Hersh Shroff; Helena Chang; Jason Rogers; Thomas A. Ullman; Benjamin L. Cohen; Steven H. Itzkowitz; Bruce E. Sands


Gastroenterology | 2018

17 - Improved Quality of Care and Quality of Life for IBD Patients using Healthpromise App: A Randomized, Control Trial

Ashish Atreja; Eva Szigethy; Emamuzo Otobo; Helena L. Chang; Laurie Keefer; Jason Rogers; Akshay Kohli; Thomas A. Ullman; James F. Marion; Benjamin L. Cohen; Elana A. Maser; Steven H. Itzkowitz; Jean-Frederic Colombel; Bruce E. Sands


Journal of Crohns & Colitis | 2017

P554 Impact of real world home based remote monitoring on quality of care and quality of life in inflammatory bowel disease patients: one year results of pragmatic randomized trial.

Ashish Atreja; S. Khan; Emamuzo Otobo; Jason Rogers; Thomas A. Ullman; A. Grinspan; Steven H. Itzkowitz; E. Maser; Benjamin L. Cohen; J.-F. Colombel; Bruce E. Sands


Iproceedings | 2017

HealthPROMISE: Utilization of Patient Reported Outcomes to Measure Quality of Life in Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Ashish Atreja; Emamuzo Otobo; Helena Chang; Laurie Keefer; Jason Rogers; Thomas A. Ullman; Karthik Ramireddy; James F. Marion; Allyssa Deorocki; Ed Berde; Rivelle Zlatopolsky; Akshay Kohli; Pavan Choksi; Steven H. Itzkowitz; Jean-Fred Colombel; Bruce E. Sands


Iproceedings | 2017

Use of Electronic Patient Reported Outcomes and Automated Devices for Heart Failure Disease Management

Sean Pinney; Emamuzo Otobo; Robert Freeman; Jason Rogers; Farah Fasihuddin; Karthik Ramireddy; Allyssa Deorocki; Neda Hassanzadeh; Marni Goldstein; Rivelle Zlatopolsky; Jennifer Ullman; Ashish Atreja

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Jason Rogers

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Thomas A. Ullman

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Benjamin L. Cohen

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Eva Szigethy

University of Pittsburgh

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Laurie Keefer

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Steven H. Itzkowitz

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Farah Fasihuddin

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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