| Literature DB >> 29089290 |
Ann Langius-Eklöf1, Mats Christiansen1, Veronica Lindström1, Karin Blomberg2, Maria Hälleberg Nyman2, Yvonne Wengström1, Kay Sundberg1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients undergoing radiotherapy for prostate cancer experience symptoms related to both the cancer itself and its treatment, and it is evident that patients with prostate cancer have unmet supportive care needs related to their disease. Over the past decade, there has been an increase in the amount of research within the field of mobile health and the use of apps as tools for managing illness. The main challenge is to develop a mobile technology to its full potential of being interactive in real time. The interactive app Interaktor, which aims to identify and manage symptoms in real time includes (1) a function for patients' assessment of the occurrence, frequency, and distress of symptoms; (2) a connection to a monitoring Web interface; (3) a risk assessment model that sends alerts via text message to health care providers; (4) continuous access to evidence-based self-care advice and links to relevant websites for more information; and (5) graphs for the patients and health care providers to view the history of symptom reporting.Entities:
Keywords: mHealth; mobile apps; prostate cancer; symptom assessment
Year: 2017 PMID: 29089290 PMCID: PMC5686419 DOI: 10.2196/cancer.7599
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Cancer ISSN: 2369-1999
Figure 1Illustration of the Interaktor app.
The semistructured interview guide.
| Question | Follow-up question | |
| 1. | What was it like to report in the mobile phone? | Difficulties and benefits or opportunities? |
| 2. | How did you experience the technology? | |
| 3. | How did you perceive the questions? | Relevant or something missing? |
| 4. | What was it like to report daily? | |
| 5. | Was it relevant to report from the beginning of treatment to 3 weeks after the end of treatment? | |
| 6. | Have you been contacted by a nurse after an alert? | If so, your experience? |
| 7. | Can you describe what use you have had of the self-care advice? | |
| 8. | Can you describe how you used the Internet links? | |
| 9. | Can you describe how you used the historical graph? | |
| 10. | Is there anything else you want to add? | |
Clinical and sociodemographic characteristics of the study participants.
| Clinical and sociodemographic characteristics | Descriptive analyses (N=66) | |
| Mean (SD) | 69 (5.8) | |
| Median (range) | 70 (53-82) | |
| Married or living with partner | 57 (86) | |
| Living alone | 9 (14) | |
| Junior compulsory | 9 (14) | |
| Senior high school | 23 (36) | |
| Postgraduate or university | 32 (50) | |
| Working, retired | 59 (89) | |
| Sick leave | 7 (11) | |
| 1 | 16 (24) | |
| 2 | 29 (44) | |
| 3 | 17 (26) | |
| Missing | 4 (6) | |
| Adjuvant hormonal therapy | 50 (76) | |
| EBRTa | 20 (30) | |
| Brachytherapy combined with EBRT | 46 (70) | |
aEBRT: external beam radiotherapy.
Occurrences, frequency, and distress of the symptoms as reported in the app by patients with prostate cancer (N=63) during their radiotherapy.
| Symptoms (number of patients reporting at least once) | Occurrence | Frequency | Distress (N=14) | ||
| n (%) | Mean (SD) | Range | Mean (SD) | Range | |
| Urinary urgency (n=60) | 1875 (18.70) | 2.18 (0.676) | 1-4 | 2.07 (0.437) | 1-3 |
| Fatigue (n=58) | 1838 (18.33) | 2.22 (0.589) | 1-4 | 2.06 (0.577) | 1-4 |
| Hot flushes (n=43) | 1621 (16.17) | 1.99 (0.483) | 1-4 | 1.89 (0.429) | 1-4 |
| Difficulties in urinating (n=47) | 1053 (10.50) | 2.28 (0.692) | 1-4 | 2.22 (0.734) | 1-4 |
| Pain (n=46) | 685 (6.83) | 2.30 (0.714) | 1-4 | 2.38 (0.559) | 1-4 |
| Insomnia (n=43) | 651 (6.49) | N/Aa | N/A | 2.20 (0.592) | 1-4 |
| Diarrhea (n=48) | 598 (5.97) | 2.08 (0.525) | 1-4 | 2.10 (0.536) | 1-4 |
| Urinary leakage (n=27) | 358 (3.58) | 1.94 (0.568) | 1-3 | 2.14 (0.602) | 1-4 |
| Stool leakage (n=29) | 273 (2.72) | 1.59 (0.527) | 1-3 | 2.01 (0.756) | 1-4 |
| Obstipation (n=30) | 255 (2.54) | N/A | N/A | 2.20 (0.689) | 1-4 |
| Depression (n=28) | 253 (2.52) | 2.29 (0.885) | 1-4 | 2.39 (0.780) | 1-4 |
| Worry (n=23) | 248 (2.48) | 1.95 (0.724) | 1-4 | 2.20 (0.610) | 1-4 |
| Hematuria (n=33) | 175 (1.75) | 2.23 (0.833) | 1-4 | 1.79 (0.497) | 1-3 |
| Blood in stool (n=22) | 142 (1.42) | N/A | N/A | 1.93 (0.608) | 1-4 |
aN/A: not applicable.
Distribution of the alerts as reported in the app by patients with prostate cancer (N=63) during their radiotherapy presented on symptom and alert levels.
| Symptoms (number of patients reporting) | Yellow alerts, N=1049, n (%) | Red alerts, N=517, n (%) |
| Urinary urgency (n=52) | 359 (34.22) | 127 (24.6) |
| Pain (n=63) | 287 (27.36) | 212 (41.0) |
| Difficulties urinating (n=44) | 274 (26.12) | 72 (13.9) |
| Depressed (n=13) | 75 (7.15) | 38 (7.4) |
| Worry (n=16) | 29 (2.77) | 36 (6.9) |
| Hematuria (n=21) | 25 (2.38) | 32 (6.2) |
| Obstipation | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.0) |
| Blood in stool | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.0) |