Patient-directed data capture for clinical research: A pilot study testing two platforms.
BACKGROUND: Patient-directed data capture enables individuals to access and share their electronic health record (EHR) data, potentially supporting patient engagement while also reducing data fragmentation. Although many vendors offer patient-directed data capture, little is known about how feasible or reliable these approaches are in practice. METHODS: We conducted a single-site pilot study to evaluate the feasibility of different patient-directed data capture platforms. Thirty-four participants hospitalized for heart failure at Duke Health participated; 26 engaged with Hugo Health, which used application programming interfaces (APIs) to retrieve data, and 17 with Datavant, which relied on records requests. Nine participants used both platforms. RESULTS: Data retrieval success varied by method: the API approach retrieved 88 % of requested records, while the records request approach retrieved 20 %. Concordance analysis showed the API approach captured additional terms from external systems (e.g., sacubitril/valsartan, 75.0 %) but missed some local EHR diagnoses (e.g., coronary heart disease, 50.0 %). The records-request method captured less external data and had higher rates of data omission. Only 22 % of participants reported willingness to reuse their assigned vendor, and 33 % required onboarding support. Technical challenges included the need to process JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) files (API approach) and to manually abstract documents from PDF files (records request approach). CONCLUSIONS: This pilot study demonstrates that patient-directed data capture is technically possible but shows substantial variability by method. While API-based retrieval achieved high success rates, records request achieved limited success, underscoring the need for improved workflows and user support to make this approach broadly feasible.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Public Health
- Pilot Projects
- Patient Participation
- Middle Aged
- Male
- Information Storage and Retrieval
- Humans
- Heart Failure
- General Clinical Medicine
- Female
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Public Health
- Pilot Projects
- Patient Participation
- Middle Aged
- Male
- Information Storage and Retrieval
- Humans
- Heart Failure
- General Clinical Medicine
- Female