University of Birmingham partners with Dexter and Cegedim Health Data in gestational diabetes trial

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The University of Birmingham, Dexter* and Cegedim Health Data have partnered in a trial of a new approach that automates finding and recruiting patients for randomised clinical trials (RCTs) and evaluates a specific intervention to improve the uptake of testing for type 2 diabetes amongst women at risk of the disease.

The RADIANT** trial is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Research for Patient Benefit programme.

It will focus on gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), which is diagnosed in over 30,000 women a year in the UK. Although GDM commonly resolves after giving birth, some 50% of women who have had GDM go on to develop type 2 diabetes, so all women diagnosed with it are advised to have yearly diabetes tests. However, few of them do.1

RADIANT will use Dexter’s new software platform, which was developed at the University’s Institute for Applied Health Research, to identify women who are suitable for inclusion in the trial from Cegedim Health Data’s real-world database, The Health Improvement Network (THIN), which is an anonymised database of primary care records.

Our aim in this trial is to validate that a data-driven approach offers better outcomes as well as time and cost savings. We are using just a small subset of the wealth of data that is captured in electronic patient records, and we hope that this first study is one of many more to come.

Dr Francesca Crowe, Institute of Applied Health Research, Univeristy of Birmingham

Cegedim will then use its own software to check eligibility, randomise women to the intervention or control group, and send a text message reminder to women in the intervention group. This will include a link to an animation developed at the University that details the purpose of the test, what it involves, and encourages them to book a diabetes test with their GP.

Dr Francesca Crowe, Lecturer in Epidemiology and Health Informatics, is leading the trial. She said: “Standard randomised controlled trials (RCTs) rely on manual methods to identify and include patients, which makes the process time-consuming and costly. Our aim in this trial is to validate that a data-driven approach offers better outcomes as well as time and cost savings, and we will also find out whether the text message and animation are acceptable and good value for money.”

As a long-standing partner of both the University of Birmingham and the NHS at large, we are delighted to be involved in their exemplar RADIANT study, which we also hope will mark a new era for data-driven, randomised controlled trials.

Samir Dhalla, Head of THIN, Cegedim Healthcare Solutions

Cegedim will then use its own software to check eligibility, randomise women to the intervention or control group, and send a text message reminder to women in the intervention group. This will include a link to an animation developed at the University that details the purpose of the test, what it involves, and encourages them to book a diabetes test with their GP.

Dr Francesca Crowe, Lecturer in Epidemiology and Health Informatics, is leading the trial. She said: “Standard randomised controlled trials (RCTs) rely on manual methods to identify and include patients, which makes the process time-consuming and costly. Our aim in this trial is to validate that a data-driven approach offers better outcomes as well as time and cost savings, and we will also find out whether the text message and animation are acceptable and good value for money.”