A Randomized Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy of Online Follow-up Visits in the Management of Acne

April 2010  | Alice J. Watson, MBChB, MRCP, MPH; Hagit Bergman, MD, MPH; Christy M. Williams, MD; Joseph C. Kvedar, MD


Arch Dermatol. 2010;146(4):406-411.

Abstract

Objective:  To evaluate whether delivering acne follow-up care via an asynchronous, remote online visit (e-visit) platform produces equivalent clinical outcomes to office care.

Design:  A prospective, randomized controlled study.

Setting:  Two teaching hospitals in Boston between September 2005 and May 2007.

Participants:  A total of 151 patients with mild to moderate facial acne.

Interventions:  Subjects were asked to carry out 4 follow-up visits using either an e-visit platform or conventional office care. At 6-week intervals, subjects in the e-visit group were prompted to send images of their skin and an update, via a secure Web site, to their dermatologist. Dermatologists responded with advice and electronic prescriptions.

Main Outcome Measures:  The primary outcome measure was change in total inflammatory lesion count between the first and last visit. The major secondary outcomes were subject and dermatologist satisfaction with care and length of time to complete visits.

Results:  The mean age of subjects was 28 years; most were female (78%), white (65%), and college educated (69%). One hundred twenty-one of the initial 151 subjects completed the study. The decrease in total inflammatory lesion count was similar in the e-visit and office visit groups (6.67 and 9.39, respectively) (P = .49). Both subjects and dermatologists reported comparable satisfaction with care regardless of visit type (P = .06 and P = .16, respectively). Compared with office visits, e-visits were time saving for subjects and time neutral for dermatologists (4 minutes, 8 seconds vs 4 minutes, 42 seconds) (P = .57).

Conclusion:  Delivering follow-up care to acne patients via an e-visit platform produced clinical outcomes equivalent to those of conventional office visits.

 

Research Materials & External Resources

A Randomized Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy of Online Follow-up Visits in the Management of Acne
April 2010 | Alice J. Watson, MBChB, MRCP, MPH; Hagit Bergman, MD, MPH; Christy M. Williams, MD; Joseph C. Kvedar, MD
Text-message reminders to improve sunscreen use: a randomized, controlled trial using electronic monitoring
November 2009 | Armstrong AW, Watson AJ, Makredes M, Frangos JE, Kimball AB, Kvedar JC
The Role of Online Support Communities: Benefits of Expanded Social Networks to Patients With Psoriasis
January 2009 | Shereene Z. Idriss, BA; Joseph C. Kvedar, MD; Alice J. Watson, MBChB, MRCP, MPH
Staying on top in dermatology - why we must act now to address the capacity challenge
April 2008 | Watson AJ and Kvedar JC
Telemedicine and teledermatology: Past, present and future
November 2007 | Wurm EM, Hofmann-Wellenhof R, Wurm R, Soyer HP
Teledermatology. Review of 917 teleconsults
June 2007 | Martínez-García S, del Boz-González J, Martín-González T, Samaniego-González E, Crespo-Erchiga V
Melanoma screening with cellular phones
Wednesday, May 30, 2007 | Massone C, Hofmann-Wellenhof R, Ahlgrimm-Siess V, Gabler G, Ebner C, Peter Soyer H
Economic evaluation of interactive teledermatology compared with conventional care
April 2007 | Armstrong AW, Dorer DJ, Lugn NE, Kvedar JC.
Teledermatology
Tuesday, February 27, 2007 | Watson AJ, Bergman H, Kvedar JC
Evaluation of digital skin images submitted by patients who received practical training or an online tutorial
2006 | Qureshi AA, Brandling-Bennett HA, Giberti S, McClure D, Halpern EF, Kvedar JC.
 
 

Newsletter Signup

Go