| Literature DB >> 30720437 |
Masakatsu Ono1, Stefan Schneider1, Doerte U Junghaenel1, Arthur A Stone1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) involves repeated sampling of people's current experiences in real time in their natural environments, which offers a granular perspective on patients' experience of pain and other symptoms. However, EMA can be burdensome to patients, and its benefits depend upon patients' engagement in the assessments.Entities:
Keywords: IPD meta-analysis; chronic pain; completion rate; compliance rate; ecological momentary assessment; experience sampling
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30720437 PMCID: PMC6379815 DOI: 10.2196/11398
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Flow diagram describing the identification of databases. EMA: ecological momentary assessment.
Participant and study level descriptive characteristics.
| Characteristics | Statistics | Reference | ||
| Pain intensity, mean (SD), range | 42.00 (20.54), 1.88-92.71 | —a | ||
| Age (years), mean (SD), range | 48.70 (13.08), 19-80 | — | ||
| Female, n (%) | 469 (67) | — | ||
| Osteoarthritis | 175 (25) | — | ||
| Rheumatoid arthritis | 71 (10) | — | ||
| Fibromyalgia | 73 (10) | — | ||
| Mixed or others | 386 (55) | — | ||
| Sample size | 70.10 (22.75), 31-115 | — | ||
| Within-person processes | 5 (50) | [ | ||
| Intervention to reduce pain | 1 (10) | [ | ||
| Methodological (eg, recall bias) | 4 (40) | [ | ||
| 12.30 (8.71), 4-28 | — | |||
| 4-7, n (%) | 5 (50) | [ | ||
| 8-14, n (%) | 3 (30) | [ | ||
| 15-28, n (%) | 2 (20) | [ | ||
| 6.25 (2.60), 3-12 | — | |||
| 3-5 | 5 (42) | [ | ||
| 6-8 | 5 (42) | [ | ||
| 9-12 | 2 (17) | [ | ||
| 24.60 (18.93), 6-63 | — | |||
| 6-10 | 2 (20) | [ | ||
| 11-20 | 5 (50) | [ | ||
| 21-63 | 3 (30) | [ | ||
aNot applicable.
bValues for sampling density are based on n=12 datasets (one study contained three datasets with different numbers of prompts by design).
Figure 2Distribution of patient-level average ecological momentary assessment completion rates.
Three-level multilevel model of predictors of ecological momentary assessment completion.
| Predictors | Estimate | Standard error | ||||
| Intercept | 88.61 | 16.26 | <.001 | |||
| Study daysa | –2.29 | 0.32 | <.001 | |||
| Daily average painb | –0.23 | 0.20 | .25 | |||
| Linear | 1.77 | 0.24 | .002 | |||
| Quadraticc | –0.62 | 0.24 | .009 | |||
| Female sex | –1.29 | 1.14 | .26 | |||
| Osteoarthritis | 0.23 | 1.84 | .90 | |||
| Rheumatoid arthritis | 0.99 | 2.17 | .65 | |||
| Fibromyalgia | 0.64 | 1.76 | .72 | |||
| Age×study days | 0.56 | 0.23 | .02 | |||
| Patient average paind | 0.03 | 0.24 | .89 | |||
| Duration (number of days) | 0.26 | 0.36 | .48 | |||
| Density (number of prompts per day) | –0.16 | 1.06 | .88 | |||
| Lengths (number of items) | –0.17 | 0.16 | .27 | |||
| Study average pain | –0.57 | 3.78 | .88 | |||
| Within-person residual | 257.12 | 4.47 | <.001 | |||
| Intercept | 105.61 | 9.20 | <.001 | |||
| Study day | 3.39 | 1.56 | .03 | |||
| Daily average pain | 3.59 | 1.02 | <.001 | |||
| Intercept | 58.46 | 25.09 | .02 | |||
| 23 | —e | — | ||||
| –2log likelihood | 67872.34 | — | — | |||
| AICf | 67918.35 | — | — | |||
| BICg | 68078.85 | — | — | |||
aStudy day was coded in weekly units.
bDaily pain was within-person centered.
cAge was centered at 50 years.
dPatient-level pain was within-study centered.
eNot applicable.
fAIC: Akaike Information Criterion.
gBIC: Bayesian Information Criterion.
Figure 3Scatter plot of average daily completion rates by age. An overlaying line graph represents average completion rates by patient age groups. For example, the average of the first group of patients in their 20s is indicated at the age of 25 years.
Figure 4The cross-level interaction effect between age and study day.