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Formative Study on the Wearability and Usability of a Large-Volume Patch Injector

Med Devices (Auckl). 2021 Nov 16:14:363-377. doi: 10.2147/MDER.S337670. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Background: The subcutaneous self-administration of biologics using a single large-volume bolus dose requires novel large-volume patch injectors. However, the usability and wearability of such on-body devices has rarely been investigated thus far. Therefore, this formative simulated use experiment studies the overall handling and acceptability in terms of the size and weight of a novel 10 mL large-volume patch injector device platform.

Methods: Twenty-three participants, including patients and healthcare professionals, simulated two injections with the large-volume patch injector, each lasting 17 min. During the injections, the patient participants performed predefined movements and activities with the on-body devices. Perceived usability and wearability were assessed through observation by the moderator and participant-reported feedback using five-point Likert scales and open-ended interviews.

Results: All participants successfully completed the simulated injections. Only non-serious usability issues were identified. Users rated the device acceptability in terms of wearability and usability with high ratings.

Conclusion: The results suggest the safe and effective usage of a novel prefilled large-volume patch injector that enables the subcutaneous delivery of a single bolus dose of up to 10 mL with an injection duration of 15 min. The participants of the simulated use study successfully used the device regardless of the disease state, age, or body size and habitus.

Keywords: bolus dose; drug delivery; large-volume injection; medical devices; self-medication; subcutaneous injection; usability.

Grants and funding

This study was financed by Ypsomed AG and conducted by Insight Product Development.