JMIR mHealth and uHealth (Jan 2024)

Engagement With a Remote Symptom-Tracking Platform Among Participants With Major Depressive Disorder: Randomized Controlled Trial

  • Katie M White,
  • Ewan Carr,
  • Daniel Leightley,
  • Faith Matcham,
  • Pauline Conde,
  • Yatharth Ranjan,
  • Sara Simblett,
  • Erin Dawe-Lane,
  • Laura Williams,
  • Claire Henderson,
  • Matthew Hotopf

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/44214
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
p. e44214

Abstract

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BackgroundMultiparametric remote measurement technologies (RMTs), which comprise smartphones and wearable devices, have the potential to revolutionize understanding of the etiology and trajectory of major depressive disorder (MDD). Engagement with RMTs in MDD research is of the utmost importance for the validity of predictive analytical methods and long-term use and can be conceptualized as both objective engagement (data availability) and subjective engagement (system usability and experiential factors). Positioning the design of user interfaces within the theoretical framework of the Behavior Change Wheel can help maximize effectiveness. In-app components containing information from credible sources, visual feedback, and access to support provide an opportunity to promote engagement with RMTs while minimizing team resources. Randomized controlled trials are the gold standard in quantifying the effects of in-app components on engagement with RMTs in patients with MDD. ObjectiveThis study aims to evaluate whether a multiparametric RMT system with theoretically informed notifications, visual progress tracking, and access to research team contact details could promote engagement with remote symptom tracking over and above the system as usual. We hypothesized that participants using the adapted app (intervention group) would have higher engagement in symptom monitoring, as measured by objective and subjective engagement. MethodsA 2-arm, parallel-group randomized controlled trial (participant-blinded) with 1:1 randomization was conducted with 100 participants with MDD over 12 weeks. Participants in both arms used the RADAR-base system, comprising a smartphone app for weekly symptom assessments and a wearable Fitbit device for continuous passive tracking. Participants in the intervention arm (n=50, 50%) also had access to additional in-app components. The primary outcome was objective engagement, measured as the percentage of weekly questionnaires completed during follow-up. The secondary outcomes measured subjective engagement (system engagement, system usability, and emotional self-awareness). ResultsThe levels of completion of the Patient Health Questionnaire-8 (PHQ-8) were similar between the control (67/97, 69%) and intervention (66/97, 68%) arms (P value for the difference between the arms=.83, 95% CI −9.32 to 11.65). The intervention group participants reported slightly higher user engagement (1.93, 95% CI −1.91 to 5.78), emotional self-awareness (1.13, 95% CI −2.93 to 5.19), and system usability (2.29, 95% CI −5.93 to 10.52) scores than the control group participants at follow-up; however, all CIs were wide and included 0. Process evaluation suggested that participants saw the in-app components as helpful in increasing task completion. ConclusionsThe adapted system did not increase objective or subjective engagement in remote symptom tracking in our research cohort. This study provides an important foundation for understanding engagement with RMTs for research and the methodologies by which this work can be replicated in both community and clinical settings. Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT04972474; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04972474 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)RR2-10.2196/32653