| Literature DB >> 28404542 |
Mor Nahum1,2, Thomas M Van Vleet2, Vikaas S Sohal3, Julie J Mirzabekov4,5, Vikram R Rao6, Deanna L Wallace7, Morgan B Lee7, Heather Dawes7, Alit Stark-Inbar2,8, Joshua Thomas Jordan9, Bruno Biagianti2,3, Michael Merzenich2, Edward F Chang7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mood disorders are dynamic disorders characterized by multimodal symptoms. Clinical assessment of symptoms is currently limited to relatively sparse, routine clinic visits, requiring retrospective recollection of symptoms present in the weeks preceding the visit. Novel advances in mobile tools now support ecological momentary assessment of mood, conducted frequently using mobile devices, outside the clinical setting. Such mood assessment may help circumvent problems associated with infrequent reporting and better characterize the dynamic presentation of mood symptoms, informing the delivery of novel treatment options.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; depression; ecological momentary assessment; mobile; mood disorders
Year: 2017 PMID: 28404542 PMCID: PMC5406620 DOI: 10.2196/mhealth.6544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Figure 1Posit Science’s mobile mood tracker app. Left: the app’s intro screen on the iPad. The user clicks on any tile to start the assessment. Right: single example items from PHQ-9, GAD-7, Rumination, and IMS are shown. PHQ-9: patient health questionnaire, 9-item. GAD-7: generalized anxiety disorder, 7-item. IMS: Immediate Mood Scaler.
Figure 2(A) PHQ-9 (red bars) and GAD-7 (blue bars) score distribution. Since the GAD-7 scale only has 4 categories and PHQ-9 has 5 categories, we have included PHQ-9 scores of moderately severe to severe in the “Mod to Severe” category. (B) PHQ-9 individual score correlation with the GAD-7 scale. (C) Correlation between PHQ-9 (red) and GAD-7 (blue) scales and the rumination scale. (D) Correlation between PHQ-9 (red) and GAD-7 (blue) scores with the full IMS score. PHQ-9: patient health questionnaire, 9-item. GAD-7: generalized anxiety disorder, 7-item. IMS: Immediate Mood Scaler.
Factor analysis pattern matrix for IMS-12 items.
| IMS item | Factor 1 Depression | Factor 2 Anxiety | ||
| q3 | Worthless | Valuable | .13 | |
| q8 | Pessimistic | Optimistic | −.06 | |
| q9 | Apathetic | Motivated | .20 | |
| q10 | Guilty | Proud | .24 | |
| q11 | Numb | Interested | −.01 | |
| q12 | Withdrawn | Welcoming | .16 | |
| q16 | Hopeless | Hopeful | −.15 | |
| q18 | Tense | Relaxed | .03 | |
| q19 | Worried | Untroubled | .03 | |
| q20 | Fearful | Fearless | .17 | |
| q21 | Anxious | Peaceful | .09 | |
| q22 | Restless | Calm | .01 | |
aValues are denoted in italics for the factor they loaded more for.
Figure 3Correlations between IMS-12 and standardized scales. Correlations between IMS-12 total (left, gray), IMS-12 depression (middle, red), and IMS-12 anxiety (right, blue) with PHQ-9 (A; top row), GAD-7 (B; middle row), and rumination (C; bottom row) scales. Pearson r values and number of subjects are shown for each graph. PHQ-9: patient health questionnaire, 9-item. GAD-7: generalized anxiety disorder, 7-item. IMS: Immediate Mood Scaler.
Figure 4Repeated IMS data frequency. IMS data was collected within days and across days for 56 participants. (A) A histogram showing the total number of sessions completed by participants. (B) Number of sessions completed on the same day (multiple sessions for participants). (C) A histogram showing the unique days of IMS assessments completed by participants. (D) Total number of sessions completed as a function of baseline PHQ-9 score (r=.18, P=.18). PHQ-9: patient health questionnaire, 9-item. IMS: Immediate Mood Scaler.
IMS-12 intraclass correlations.
| Depression level | N | ICCa (95% CI) | Group comparisons | ||
| Minimal | 39 | .69 (.54 to .81) | Minimal versus mild or moderate | 1.53 | .12 |
| Mild to moderate | 27 | .42 (.25 to .61) | Minimal versus moderate severe or severe | .78 | .43 |
| Moderately severe to severe | 21 | .79 (.63 to .89) | Mild to moderate vs moderately severe or severe | 2.03 | .04 |
aICC: intraclass correlations.
Model variables for the prediction of PHQ-9 and GAD-7 from time, baseline measurements, and IMS-12.
| PHQ-9a (n=17) | GAD-7b (n=17) | |||||||||
| Model | Beta | Degrees of freedom | Model | Beta | Degrees of freedom | |||||
| Time | −.13 | −0.48 | 7.79 | .65 | Time | −.00 | −0.01 | 5.23 | .99 | |
| +PHQ-9 baseline | 3.68 | 8.83 | 16.9 | <.001 | +GAD-7 baseline | 4.47 | 10.45 | 18.61 | <.001 | |
| +IMS-12c | 1.03 | 2.5 | 45.47 | .02 | +IMS-12 | .91 | 2.6 | 35.98 | .01 | |
| Intercept | 11.05 | 9.33 | 1,12.1 | <.001 | Intercept | 9.79 | 10.94 | 13.9 | <.001 | |
aPHQ-9: Patient Health Questionnaire, 9-item.
bGAD-7: generalized anxiety disorder, 7-item.
cIMS-12: Immediate Mood Scaler, 12-item.