| Literature DB >> 27601354 |
Marco Egbring1, Elmira Far, Malgorzata Roos, Michael Dietrich, Mathis Brauchbar, Gerd A Kullak-Ublick, Andreas Trojan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The well-being of breast cancer patients and reporting of adverse events require close monitoring. Mobile apps allow continuous recording of disease- and medication-related symptoms in patients undergoing chemotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; breast neoplasms; collaboration; daily functional activity; mobile app
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27601354 PMCID: PMC5030453 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.6414
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Questions regarding the relationship between patient and physician for the three visits for each patient group.
| Questions | Group and visit number, median (IQR)a | ||||||||
| Control | App | App and physician | |||||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| Concentration problems during visit | 13 (69) | 6b (77) | 17b (64) | 10 (51) | 2c (8) | 4c (10) | 3 (29) | 4b,c (18) | 4c (12) |
| Well-informed about therapy | 94 (15) | 94 (35) | 94 (20) | 94 (20) | 95 (20) | 95 (14) | 94 (21) | 94 (14) | 96 (12) |
| Well-informed about disease | 92 (25) | 94 (31) | 94 (19) | 92 (24) | 93 (24) | 95 (15) | 96 (18) | 96 (14) | 96 (30) |
| Less likely to disfavor with care | 4 (40) | 6b (73) | 6 (17) | 4 (10) | 2b,c (5) | 4 (13) | 2 (10) | 1c (8) | 4 (6) |
| Awareness regarding adverse events | 96 (23) | 94 (14) | 94 (15) | 96 (21) | 96 (18) | 98 (13) | 100 (13) | 100 (14) | 100 (15) |
| Satisfaction with medical care | 96 (10) | 96 (14) | 95 (17) | 99 (12) | 96 (10) | 98 (11) | 100 (12) | 99 (11) | 100 (7) |
| Trust in data security | 96 (14) | 99 (13) | 99 (13) | 98 (13) | 95 (11) | 100 (8) | 100 (11) | 100 (7) | 100 (8) |
| Feeling of being taken seriously | 98 (18) | 96 (17) | 94 (19) | 96 (17) | 96 (11) | 99 (11) | 100 (12) | 100 (8) | 99 (8) |
a Value of 0 indicates complete disagreement, whereas 100 represents complete agreement with the statement in the question.
b,c Annotations mark significant differences between the three groups. In this case three combinations of group pairs are possible. Two groups differ significantly in the answer to the question if they have different superscript characters.
Figure 1CONSORT diagram demonstrating the flow of patients.
Summary of baseline characteristics of participants.
| Characteristics | All patients (N=139) | Control (n=44) | App (n=46) | App and physician (n=49) | |
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 53 (13) | 56 (15) | 50 (10) | 53 (12) | |
| Sex (female), n (%) | 139 (100) | 44 (100) | 46 (100) | 49 (100) | |
| Adjuvant | 86 (61.9) | 25 (57) | 30 (65) | 31 (63) | |
| Neoadjuvant | 50 (36) | 18 (41) | 16 (35) | 16 (33) | |
| Biopsy (sentinel) | 50 (36) | 17 (39) | 16 (35) | 17 (35) | |
| Breast conserving | 72 (51.8) | 23 (52) | 27 (59) | 22 (45) | |
| Breast ablation | 14 (10.1) | 3 (7) | 3 (7) | 8 (16) | |
| Visits 1-2 | 21 (6; 6-43) | 21 (6; 6-43) | 20 (6; 7-27) | 21 (2; 7-42) | |
| Visits 2-3 | 21 (8; 6-42) | 21 (9; 7-42) | 21 (7; 7-28) | 20 (7; 6-28) | |
| Visits 1-3 | 42 (7; 13-84) | 42 (2; 14-84) | 41 (9; 26-49) | 39 (7; 13-56) | |
Figure 2Visual analog scale for current and worst daily functional activity in the questionnaire.
Figure 3Participants who used the Internet to obtain disease-specific information.