Abstract

Chronic diseases are a global concern and a leading cause of death and disability. These conditions require intensive and ongoing medical assistance to maximize outcomes and avoid the risk of frequent flare-ups and hospitalizations, which increase the cost of healthcare. Remote patient management (RPM) is a strategy that allows for accurate home monitoring of chronic patients, enabling the team to improve care through prevention and early identification of problems, with consequent timely interventions. Peritoneal dialysis (PD) is a home-based therapy representing an ideal model for testing the ability of RPM to improve clinical outcomes by allowing the 2-way link between health providers and patients. The literature and our own results confirm that RPM applied to automated peritoneal dialysis (APD) allows an efficient use of healthcare resources, helping to improve tailoring of APD prescription and to intervene early with troubleshooting, reducing the frequency of in-person visits for emergency problems. RPM-APD is today made possible by a cloud-based software providing bidirectional communication between patient's home and the hospital care team (Cycler HOMECHOICE CLARIA with SHARESOURCE platform). This approach can be useful in promptly identifying patients with higher risk of complications: a knowledge-based management permits the reduction of urgent events, and the prevention of clinical complications improving patient outcomes. In our experience, matured over 2 years in a cohort of prevalent patients, we observed a significant reduction of patient drop-out and technique failure, the number of scheduled and unscheduled hospital visits, the number of episodes of overhydration, rate of hospitalization, episodes of non-compliance to prescription, patient and hospital team time spent in travelling and management of therapy, healthcare costs and patient's expenditure, miles travelled by patients from home to hospital and vice versa. The cost/benefit analysis is strongly in favor of the RPM-APD modality versus the traditional periodic hospital visit regime.

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