ukBackground: Glaucoma is a chronic disease of the optic nerve and a leading cause of severe visual loss in the UK. Once patients have been diagnosed, they need regular monitoring at hospital eye services. Recent advances in technology mean patients with glaucoma can now monitor their disease at home. This could be more convenient for patients and potentially reduce costs and increase capacity for the NHS. However, it is uncertain whether self-monitoring would be acceptable or possible for patients with glaucoma.Objectives: The objectives were to: identify which patients are most appropriate for home monitoring; understand views of key stakeholders (patients, clinicians, researchers) on whether home glaucoma monitoring is feasible and acceptable; develop a conceptual framework for the economic evaluation of home glaucoma monitoring; and explore the need for and provide evidence on the design of a future study to evaluate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of digital technologies for home monitoring of glaucoma.Design: In-home Tracking of glaucoma: Reliability, Acceptability, and Cost (I-TRAC) was a multiphase mixed-methods feasibility study with key components informed by theoretical and conceptual frameworks.Setting: Expert glaucoma specialists in the UK recruited through professional glaucoma societies; study site staff and patient participants recruited through three UK hospital eye services (England, Scotland, Northern Ireland); and UK research teams recruited though existing networks.Intervention: Home tonometer that measures intraocular pressure and a tablet computer with a visual function application. Patients were asked to use the technology weekly for 12 weeks.Results: Forty-two patients were recruited. Retention and completion of follow-up procedures was successful, with 95% (n = 40) completing the 3-month follow-up clinic visits. Adherence to the interventions was generally high [adherence to both devices (i.e. >= 80% adherence) was 55%]. Overall, patients and healthcare professionals were cautiously optimistic about the acceptability of digital technologies for home monitoring of patients with glaucoma. While most clinicians were supportive of the potential advantages glaucoma home monitoring could offer, concerns about the technologies (e.g. reliability and potential to miss disease progression) and how they would fit into routine care need to be addressed. Additionally, clarity is required on defining the ideal population for this intervention. Plans for how to evaluate value for money in a future study were also identified. However, the study also highlighted several unknowns relating to core components of a future evaluative study that require addressing before progression to a definitive effectiveness trial.Limitations: The main limitation relates to our sample and its generalisability, for example, the over-representation of educated persons of white ethnicity who were generally experienced with technology and research motivated.Conclusions: The In-home Tracking of glaucoma: Reliability, Acceptability, and Cost study has demonstrated 'cautious optimism' when considering patients' and healthcare professionals' views on the acceptability of digital technologies for home monitoring of patients with glaucoma. However, the study also highlighted several unknowns relating to the research question and design of a future evaluative study that require addressing before progression to a randomised controlled trial.
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Human Sci Res Council, Ctr Community Based Res, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
Univ Witwatersrand, SAMRC Dev Pathways Hlth Res Unit, Johannesburg, South AfricaHuman Sci Res Council, Ctr Community Based Res, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
van Heerden, Alastair
Kolozali, Sefki
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Univ Essex, Sch Comp Sci & Elect Engn, Colchester, Essex, EnglandHuman Sci Res Council, Ctr Community Based Res, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
Kolozali, Sefki
Norris, Shane A.
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Univ Witwatersrand, SAMRC Dev Pathways Hlth Res Unit, Johannesburg, South Africa
Univ Southampton, Sch Hlth & Human Dev, Southampton, Hants, EnglandHuman Sci Res Council, Ctr Community Based Res, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
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Univ York, Dept Hlth Sci, York, N Yorkshire, England
Univ York, York Environm Sustainabil Inst, York, N Yorkshire, EnglandUniv York, Dept Hlth Sci, York, N Yorkshire, England
Coventry, P. A.
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Siddiqi, N.
Ajjan, R. A.
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Univ Leeds, Sch Med, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England
Leeds Teaching Hosp NHS Trust, Leeds, W Yorkshire, EnglandUniv York, Dept Hlth Sci, York, N Yorkshire, England
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King Abdulaziz Univ, Fac Dent, Pediat Dent Postgrad Program, Jeddah, Saudi ArabiaKing Abdulaziz Univ, Fac Dent, Pediat Dent Postgrad Program, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Alrumaim, Sarah
Farsi, Nada
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King Abdulaziz Univ, Fac Dent, Dept Dent Publ Hlth, Jeddah, Saudi ArabiaKing Abdulaziz Univ, Fac Dent, Pediat Dent Postgrad Program, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Farsi, Nada
Farsi, Najat
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King Abdulaziz Univ, Fac Dentistr, Dept Pediat Dent, Jeddah, Saudi ArabiaKing Abdulaziz Univ, Fac Dent, Pediat Dent Postgrad Program, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Farsi, Najat
Baghlaf, Khlood
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King Abdulaziz Univ, Fac Dent, Dept Pediat Dent, Jeddah, Saudi ArabiaKing Abdulaziz Univ, Fac Dent, Pediat Dent Postgrad Program, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Baghlaf, Khlood
Farsi, Deema
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King Abdulaziz Univ, Fac Dent, Dept Pediat Dent, Jeddah, Saudi ArabiaKing Abdulaziz Univ, Fac Dent, Pediat Dent Postgrad Program, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia