| Literature DB >> 29137156 |
Arvind Rajagopalan1, Pooja Shah2, Melvyn W Zhang3, Roger C Ho4,5.
Abstract
This paper aims to review the application of digital platforms in the assessment and monitoring of patients with Bipolar Disorder (BPD). We will detail the current clinical criteria for the diagnosis of BPD and the tools available for patient assessment in the clinic setting. We will go on to highlight the difficulties in the assessment and monitoring of BPD patients in the clinical context. Finally, we will elaborate upon the impact that diital platforms have made, and have the potential to make, on healthcare, mental health, and specifically the management of BPD, before going on to evaluate the benefits and drawbacks of the use of such technology.Entities:
Keywords: application; bipolar disorder; bipolar disorder app; digital platform; mental health app; mobile app; mobile application; mobile platform; psychiatry app; smartphone; smartphone app; smartphone application
Year: 2017 PMID: 29137156 PMCID: PMC5704157 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci7110150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Figure 1Figure explaining the selection of studies included in the review.
Studies on digital platforms used in the assessment, monitoring and management of BPD.
| Study | Design | Sample Size | Sample Characteristics | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MONARCA [ | Prospective observational study | 17 | 67.1% ( | Subjective and objective measures in MONARCA correlate well with the HDRS-17 used by clinicians in monitoring BPD |
| SIMBA [ | Prospective observational study | 13 | 61.5% ( | High self-reported mood correlates negatively with depressive symptoms |
| Mobile Mood Diary [ | Observational study | 9 | 55% ( | Improved adherence to medications |
| SIMPLe [ | RCT | Ongoing | 18–65 years (Mean age) | Ongoing |
| Moodswings.net.au [ | RCT | 156 | 73% ( | Reduction in mood symptoms, improved functioning and improved QoL and medication adherence in intervention group |
| ORBIT [ | RCT | 26 | 75% females | Statistically significant improvement in QoL in intervention group t(15) = 2.88, 95% CI: 0.89–5.98, |
| ERPOnline [ | RCT | 96 | 61.4% females | ERPonline increased the frequency of monitoring early signs of mood change. Improved medication adherence at 12 and 48 weeks. |
| Living with Bipolar [ | RCT | 122 | 72% ( | Improvement in psychological and physical domains of QoL, well-being in the intervention group compared to control |
| Beating Bipolar [ | RCT | 50 | 38% ( | Improvement within the psychological subsection of the WHOQOL-BREF for the intervention group relative to the control group |
| BIPED [ | RCT | 100 | Ongoing | Ongoing |
| FiSTAR [ | RCT | 25 | Ongoing | Ongoing |
| FIMM [ | RCT | 19 | 68.4% ( | Patients reported stable moods on the QIDS and ASRM over a 120-day period, and on average responded to 81% of the daily message prompts and 88% of the weekly QIDS and ASRM prompts. |
MONARCA, MONitoring, treAtment and pRediCtion of bipolAr Disorder Episodes; ERP, Enhanced Relapse Prevention for Bipolar disorder; RCT, randomised controlled trial; WHOQOL-BREF, Brief World Health Organization Quality of Life; BIPED, The Bipolar Interactive Psychoeducation; FI-STAR, The Future Internet Social and Technological Alignment Research; FIMM, Facilitated Integrated Mood Management.
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-V) sub-classifications of bipolar disorder (BPD).
| Bipolar I | Bipolar II | Cyclothymia | Bipolar NOS | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Depressive episodes | ? | √ | √√ | ? |
| Manic episodes | √ | ? | √√ | ? |
| Hypomanic episodes | ? | √ | √√ | ? |
| Others | Any disorder with BPD features not meeting criteria for others |
Key: “√”—At least 1; “?”—Possibly at least 1; “√√”—Numerous.
Markers tracked by MONARCA & SIMBA.
| Application | MONARCA | SIMBA |
|---|---|---|
| Social activity | No. of outgoing/incoming calls/text messages | No. and duration of outgoing calls |
| Speech duration during calls | No. of outgoing text messages | |
| Physical activity | Accelerometer readings | Distance travelled (Global Positioning Satellite (GPS)-tracked) |
| Cell tower movement | ||
| Accelerometer readings |
Findings of this review on digital platforms for BPD.
| Difficulties in Current Monitoring and Assessment of BPD | Potential Benefits of Mobile Platforms | Potential Difficulties with Mobile Platforms |
|---|---|---|
| Late and incorrect diagnoses | Continuous real-time monitoring | Only trialled on small, non-representative patient groups |
| Lack of objective data | Novel phenotypic markers which provide objective data | Poor evidence-base |
| Patients not seeking medical intervention | Remote psychoeducation and CBT | Lack of proper security to ensure confidentiality of patient information |
| Potential for earlier diagnosis in at-risk patient groups |