A Smart Phone Application to Improve Adoption of the 2024 Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) Guidelines
A Smart Phone Application to Improve Adoption of the 2024 KDIGO CKD Guidelines
St. James's Hospital, Ireland
80 participants
Jan 14, 2026
INTERVENTIONAL
Conditions
Summary
The goal of this study is to establish whether use of a digital intervention can improve adherence and alignment with the Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) 2024 Guidelines. A subset of the study will focus on whether the intervention improves outcomes for young adults living with CKD, in the context of the imminent co-location of Children's Health Ireland on the St. James's Hospital campus. Young adults with CKD transitioning to adult services are recognised as a high-risk and vulnerable cohort, with many individuals unaware of increased cardiovascular risk and mortality¹². In response, and in the context of the co-location of Children's Health Ireland on the St. James's Hospital site, a young adult nephrology clinic has been established. The KDIGO CKD 2024 Guidelines identify transition as a period of increased risk and include recommendations regarding cardiovascular risk factor targets and the use of therapies known to delay CKD progression³. Electronic communication is a preferred method for accessing health information among many young adults⁴⁵ and aligns with Sláintecare digital health strategies⁶. A recently established, award-winning St. James's Hospital renal smartphone application is currently used by over 3,000 individuals living with CKD. The study aims to determine whether use of the application improves adherence to KDIGO guideline recommendations, with the objective of delaying CKD progression and associated complications. The application will support optimisation of care by signposting opportunities for evidence-based interventions (e.g., SGLT2 inhibitors, renin-angiotensin system inhibition) to healthcare providers. The application will also provide participants with tailored recommendations, reminders, educational materials, and collection of patient-reported outcome measures. Due to the diverse population and range of specialties at St. James's Hospital, the young adult clinic serves distinct subgroups, including individuals with sickle cell anaemia and survivors of cancer and haematological malignancies. These populations will be examined in the context of KDIGO guideline implementation, contributing to a limited international evidence base. This research evaluates an intervention designed to improve care for adults living with chronic kidney disease.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria4
- Adults aged ≥16 years.
- Diagnosed with CKD stages 1-5.
- Owns a smartphone and is capable of using mobile applications.
- Provides informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria3
- Inability to provide informed consent due to a neurocognitive impairment.
- Age 30 years or older
- The study will be conducted in the already established SJH Young Adult Clinic, with anticipated expansion coinciding with the co-location Children's Health Ireland (CHI) on site.
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Interventions
This intervention will plans to use a modified step wedge approach to ascertain if engagement with a digital application can improve alignment with the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) Guidelines or not. It is unique in that our hospital has recently established a dedicated Young Adult Clinic in the context of imminent colocation of Children's Health Ireland on site.
Locations(2)
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NCT07561957