| Literature DB >> 30959828 |
Desirée Colombo1, Javier Fernández-Álvarez2, Andrea Patané3, Michelle Semonella4, Marta Kwiatkowska5, Azucena García-Palacios6,7, Pietro Cipresso8,9, Giuseppe Riva10,11, Cristina Botella12,13.
Abstract
Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) and ecological momentary intervention (EMI) are alternative approaches to retrospective self-reports and face-to-face treatments, and they make it possible to repeatedly assess patients in naturalistic settings and extend psychological support into real life. The increase in smartphone applications and the availability of low-cost wearable biosensors have further improved the potential of EMA and EMI, which, however, have not yet been applied in clinical practice. Here, we conducted a systematic review, using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, to explore the state of the art of technology-based EMA and EMI for major depressive disorder (MDD). A total of 33 articles were included (EMA = 26; EMI = 7). First, we provide a detailed analysis of the included studies from technical (sampling methods, duration, prompts), clinical (fields of application, adherence rates, dropouts, intervention effectiveness), and technological (adopted devices) perspectives. Then, we identify the advantages of using information and communications technologies (ICTs) to extend the potential of these approaches to the understanding, assessment, and intervention in depression. Furthermore, we point out the relevant issues that still need to be addressed within this field, and we discuss how EMA and EMI could benefit from the use of sensors and biosensors, along with recent advances in machine learning for affective modelling.Entities:
Keywords: ecological momentary assessment; ecological momentary intervention; major depressive disorder
Year: 2019 PMID: 30959828 PMCID: PMC6518287 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8040465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Detailed search strategy.
| Process | Results |
|---|---|
| PubMed/Medline | 2758 |
| Web of Science | 2235 |
| Total | 4993 |
| Not duplicated | 3613 |
| Excluded (after reading title and abstract) | 3212 |
| Retrieved | 401 |
| Excluded (after applying inclusion criteria) | 361 |
| Excluded (missing experimental data) | 0 |
| Final included articles | 40 |
Figure 1PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) flow diagram.
More detailed information about the selected Ecological Momentary Assessment studies.
| Authors | Sample | Variables | Device(s) | Duration | Prompts Per Day | Sampling Schema | Compliance | Sensor(s) | Primary Outcome(s) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| [ | MDD ( | Affect | Palm Tungsten E2 | 7 days | 8 | Semi-randomized | 89% | No | Both depressed and non-depressed participants overestimate the retrospective recall of PA and NA. Depressed patients are more inaccurate in recalling NA. |
| [ | MDD ( | Randomized items from PHQ-9 questionnaire | “Mindful Moods” mobile application | 29/30 days | 3 | Randomized | 78% | No | Even if strongly correlated, the PHQ-9 scores collected through the mobile application are significantly higher than those obtained though the retrospective paper-and-pencil PHQ-9. | |
|
| [ | MDD ( | Affect; stressors; behaviours; environment; social context | PDA | 3 days | 5 | Fixed sampling scheme | 85.7% | No | High rates of acceptance and compliance are observed among both samples. Participants show a practice effect, i.e., faster responses over the course of the study. |
| [ | MDD ( | Depressive and anxiety symptoms | Palm Treo 650 Smartphone (Mental Health Telemetry mobile application) | 14 days | 1 | Selected by the patient | Not specified | No | Self-reported ratings of improvement at day 7 predict response to the treatment. | |
| [ | MDD ( | Symptoms, sleep patterns, cognitive functioning | iHOPE smartphone application | 8 weeks | 2 (symptoms) | Not specified | Not specified | No | Baseline depression scores evaluated with HAM-D are associated with scores of PHQ-9, VAS for depression and anxiety symptoms collected with the application. | |
| 1 (sleep duration and quality) | ||||||||||
|
| [ | MDD ( | Daily activities (frequency, social contacts); cortisol | Palm Pilot M100 | 4 days (over a maximum period of 7 days) | 4 (saliva samples) | Fixed sampling scheme | Not specified | No | In the control sample, daily activities are negatively associated with cortisol levels. This association is not observed in depressed patients. |
| 1 (self-report) | ||||||||||
| [ | MDD ( | Sleep patterns; social contacts; cortisol | Palm Pilot M100 | 3 non-consecutive days (over a maximum period of 7 days) | 3 (saliva samples) | Fixed sampling scheme | 93% | No | Depressed patients show lower cortisol awakening response, lower sleep quality, and more negative social interactions. | |
| 1 (self-report) | ||||||||||
| [ | MDD ( | Physiological indices (HR, respiration, accelerometer, cortisol); mood | LifeShirt System, with an integrated hand-held computer | 1 day | 6 (self-reports) | Fixed sampling scheme | 91% | LifeShirt System (HR, respiration, actigraphy) | Cortisol level and HRV do not differ between the two groups. Interestingly, NA is negatively correlated with HRV only in the control sample. | |
| 5 (saliva samples) | ||||||||||
| [ | Remitted MDD ( | Mood; ruminative self-focus; stressful events; cortisol | Palm Tungsten E2 | 2 consecutive days | 10 | Semi-randomized | 94% | No | Rumination and low mood are associated with increased activation of the HPAA. In remitted patients, HPAA is less responsive to subtle emotional events. | |
| [ | MDD ( | Affect; cognition; daily activities; cortisol | PsyMate | 30 days | 3 | Fixed sampling scheme | 92.5% | ActiCal (Respironics, Bend, OR, USA) | Compared to healthy participants, depressed patients report higher cortisol levels, higher α-amylase levels, and a greater ratio of α-amylase over cortisol. This latter association, however, disappears when correction for lifestyle factors is applied. | |
| [ | MDD ( | Affect; cortisol | PsyMate | 30 days | 3 | Fixed sampling scheme | 92.5% | No | PA and NA are bidirectionally associated with cortisol levels. Nevertheless, the direction, sign, and timing of this association show great variability among subjects. | |
|
| [ | MDD ( | Positive and negative affects | PDA | 3 days | 10 | Semi-randomized | 65% | No | Sleep quality predicts lower PA, but not NA. Low PA is associated with poor subjective sleep quality and self-reported daily dysfunction. |
| [ | MDD and mD ( | Positive and negative affects; events appraisal | Palm Pilot Zire 22 | 3 days | 10 | Semi-randomized | 65% | No | In the non-clinical sample, sleep disturbances are associated with enhanced NA in response to negative events. Considering depressed patients, sleep disturbances negatively influence the emotional reactivity to both neutral and negative events. | |
| [ | MDD ( | PA and NA, sleep quality; tiredness; rumination | PsyMate | 30 days | 3 | Fixed sampling scheme | 96% | No | Sleep quality directly influences PA and NA experienced during the following day, but not vice versa. Tiredness is a mediator. | |
| [ | MDD ( | PA; NA; fatigue; sleep; activities; cognition; melatonin | PsyMate | 30 days | 3 | Fixed sampling scheme | 93% | No | Melatonin is associated with changes in affect and fatigue. However, changes in affect and fatigue are also predictors of melatonin levels. Individuals that do not show this association report higher depression severity and worse sleep quality. | |
| [ | MDD ( | Sleep patterns | PsyMate | 30 days | 3 | Fixed sampling scheme | 96% | ActiCal (Respironics, Bend, OR, USA) | Sleep duration affects next-day physical activity. Depression does not moderate this association. | |
| [ | MDD ( | Sleep patterns and quality; suicide ideation; entrapment perception | PRO-Diary actigraph watch (CamNtech) | 7 days | 6 | Semi-randomized | 89% | Accelerometer | Poor sleep quality, both objectively and subjectively evaluated, is associated with higher next-day suicide ideations. Suicide ideation does not influence sleep patterns and quality. | |
|
| [ | MDD ( | Physical activity; positive and negative affects | Palm Pilot Zire 22 | 7 days | 8 | Randomized | 75% | No | Both samples show higher PA following physical activity. More specifically, depressed patients show a significantly higher increase in experienced PA levels after physical activity. |
| [ | MDD ( | Mood; physical symptoms; physical activity | Ruputer ECOLOG | Average: 37.43 days (range:18–67 days) | 4 | Semi-randomized | 93% | Ambulatory Monitors Inc.—actigraph | Depressive mood is associated with increased intermittency of locomotor activity. | |
| [ | MDD ( | Mood; cognition; daily activities; physical activity | PsyMate | 30 days | 3 | Fixed sampling scheme | 91% | ActiCal Respironics—actigraph | Despite the observation of large interindividual differences, results show a positive effect of physical activity on PA in all participants. | |
|
| [ | MDD ( | Context; mood; depressive symptoms; EEG (at baseline) | Palm Pilot and EEG (at baseline) | 7 days | 5 | Not specified | Not specified | No | Lower activation of bilateral PFC predicts higher rates of rumination, whereas higher levels of self-esteem are associated with lower right PFC activity. |
| [ | MDD ( | Thoughts; disturbing events; feelings; possible influencing factors; feelings; HR | Electronic diary implemented on a smartphone | 1 day | Not reported | Semi-randomized | Not specified | RS 800CX; Bodyguard2 (HR and HRV) | Depressed participants show higher rates of perseverative cognition, which are associated with lower HRV. | |
| [ | MDD ( | Events stressfulness; rumination | Palm Pilot Zire 22 | 7 days | 8 | Randomized | 72% | No | MDD and GAD participants show the same level of rumination, which is even more severe in comorbid cases. Higher rates of rumination are predictive of worse affect, more maladaptive behaviours, and more severe symptoms. | |
| [ | MDD ( | Rumination; worry; PA and NA; significant events | Palm Pilot Zire 22 | 6 to7 days | 8 | Semi-randomized | 65% | No | Levels of rumination among all the clinical samples are higher in response to significant events. Decreased PA and increased NA are associated with higher momentary rumination. | |
|
| [ | Remitted MDD ( | Perceived stress; mood | Hand held Psion “Revo” computer | 7 days | 5 | Randomized | 90% | No | Past episodes of depression are likely to increase the vulnerability to stressful events, especially in male participants. |
| [ | MDD ( | Context; mood; events (nature of the event; location; people involved; affective rating) | Palm Pilot Zire 22 | 3 non-consecutive days (over a period of 5 days) | 10 | Semi-randomized | 65% | No | Both MDD and mD patients show lower levels of positive affect and rate events as more stressful and unpleasant than the control group. Furthermore, they show a higher reduction in negative feelings after positive events. | |
| [ | MDD ( | Affect; significant events | Palm Pilot Zire 22 | 7/8 days | 8 | Randomized | 78% | No | Results point out greater emotional instability with respect to NA in depressed patients. No differences are observed in terms of reactivity, inertia, and instability in PA. | |
| [ | MDD ( | Affect and mood; events; subjective affective reactivity | Smartphone to access a web platform | 7 days | 5 | Randomized | 94% | No | Comorbidity with BPD does not imply major affective instability, but it is associated with lower subjective perception of affective reactivity. | |
| [ | Remitted MDD ( | Mood; PA and NA; visual mental imagery | “Imagine your Mood”, smartphone application | 3 days a week, for 8 weeks | 10 | Semi-randomized | Not specified | No | In both samples, higher levels of visual imagery-based processing are associated with higher levels of PA and better mood, regardless of the valence of the imagery content. Elevated levels of visual imagery-based processing are not associated with daily affective reactivity. | |
| [ | MDD ( | PA, NA, fear; hostility; sadness; interpersonal events | Palm Pilot Zire 31 | 28 days | 6 | Semi-randomized | 86% | No | Rejection and disagreement increase NA (especially hostility and sadness) both at a momentary and daily level, regardless of the diagnosis. The association between rejection/disagreement and hostility is stronger in BPD patients. | |
| [ | MDD ( | Affect; location; social context; gambling desire/motivation/activities | Palm Pilot Zire 22 | 30 days | 3 | Randomized | 73% | No | High levels of sadness and arousal are predictive of gambling desire, regardless of the diagnosis. Depressed individuals are likely to gamble to increase PA or for social reasons. | |
| [ | MDD ( | Symptoms, PA, NA, rumination, behavioural avoidance, reassurance seeking | Web-based survey | 30 days | 4 | Not specified | Not specified | No | Using a person-by-person approach, results show that moment-to-moment symptomatology is mainly driven by positive mood, hopelessness, anger, and irritability, but not depressed mood, anhedonia, or worry. |
MDD: major depressive disorder; mD: minor depression; HCG: healthy control group; BDP: borderline personality disorder; GAD: generalized anxiety disorders; PDA: personal digital assistant; DD: dysthymic disorder; PFC: prefrontal cortex; PA: positive affect; NA: negative affect; HRV: heart rate variability; PHQ-9: Patient Health Questionnaire-9; QUID-SR: Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology—Self Report; HADS-A: Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; PANAS: Positive and Negative Affect Schedule; HPAA: hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis.
More detailed information about the selected Ecological Momentary Intervention studies.
| Authors | Name | Sample | Intervention | Duration | Prompts | Sampling Schema | Sensor(s) | Primary Outcome(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Mobylize! | MDD ( | Mobylize! is a context-aware system, composed of three main elements: (1) A mobile application for the collection of self-reports; (2) a website with feedback and theoretical lessons; (3) periodic contacts with trained coaches | 8 weeks | 5/day | Randomized | 38 concurrent sensors integrated in the phone | Mobylize! significantly reduced depressive symptoms. Predictive models did not reach high levels of accuracy, especially for mood. |
| [ | PsyMate | MDD ( | Daily assessment of self-reports and weekly EMA-derived feedback through face-to-face sessions | 3 days per week, for 6 weeks | 10/day | Semi-randomized | No | The use of EMA-derived feedback as a complementary intervention to pharmacological treatment significantly decreased depressive symptoms. These improvements were also maintained over time. |
| [ | PsyMate | MDD ( | Daily assessment of self-reports and weekly EMA-derived feedback through face-to-face sessions | 3 days per week, for 6 weeks | 10/day | Semi-randomized | No | The use of Psymate as a technique of self-monitoring could improve patients’ feelings of empowerment. |
| [ | PsyMate | MDD ( | Daily assessment of self-reports and weekly EMA-derived feedback through face-to-face sessions | 3 days per week, for 6 weeks | 10/day | Semi-randomized | No | Face-to-face EMA-derived feedback sessions did not increase the rate of PA experienced during or shortly after the intervention. |
| [ | Medlink | MDD ( | Medlink is a mobile application delivering psychological support to MDD patients. The application provides users with: (1) psychoeducation; (2) weekly symptom assessment; (3) medication adherence monitoring; (4) monthly communication with a professional based on the previous points | 4 weeks | 1/week | Not specified | No | Medlink was positively evaluated by participants, especially regarding the weekly psychoeducation lessons. Depression severity of participants significantly decreased over the course of the experiment. |
| [ | Help4Mood | MDD ( | Web platform providing daily assessment of symptoms, self-monitoring, and tailored activities. The delivered content is created in response to the user’s actions through a virtual agent | About 5 weeks | CESD- VAS-VA: 1/day | Not specified | Accelerometer and acoustic speech analysis | Only half of the participants used Help4Mood regularly. Significant changes in depressive symptoms were observed only among regular users. |
| PHQ-9: 1/week | ||||||||
| [ | PsyMate | MDD ( | Daily assessment of self-reports and weekly EMA-derived feedback through face-to-face sessions | 3 days per week, for 6 weeks | 10/day | Semi-randomized | No | The use of EMA-derived feedback decreased depressive symptoms and improved maladaptive behaviours. |
| [ | PsyMate | MDD ( | Daily assessment of self-reports and weekly EMA-derived feedback through face-to-face sessions | 3 days per week, for 6 weeks | 10/day | Semi-randomized | No | The use of a self-monitoring EMA improves negative emotion differentiation. |
MDD: major depressive disorder; PA: positive affect; CESD-VAS-VA: brief visual analogue scale version of the Center of Epidemiological Studies Depression. Scale; PHQ-9: Patient Health Questionnaire.
Fields of application of EMAs for Major Depressive Disorder.
| Field of Application | Retrieved Articles | Aim | Advantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Recall bias | [ | Experimental | No retrospective bias; control over backfilling; repeated momentary measurements. |
| Symptoms monitoring | [ | Clinical | Continuous monitoring (symptoms assessment, treatment progress); real-time feedback to clinicians (e.g., crisis plan) and users (e.g., patterns visualization). |
| Cortisol dysregulation | [ | Experimental | Role of contextual variables; temporal relationship between physiological measures and self-reports. |
| Sleep patterns | [ | Experimental | Control over backfilling; no retrospective bias; integration of self-reports with passive data supplied by sensors and biosensors. |
| Physical activity | [ | Experimental | Role of contextual variables; integration of self-reports with passive data supplied by sensors; temporal relationship between physiological measures and self-reports. |
| Rumination | [ | Experimental | Role of contextual variables; rumination deployment across time. |
| Affect and emotional reactivity | [ | Experimental | Role of contextual variables; temporal deployment of affect and emotional reactivity. |
Benefits of using EMA for mood dysregulation and mood disorders as described by Ebner-Premier [16].
| Advantages | Implications | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Real-time assessments | Reduction in retrospective bias and increase in accuracy. |
| 2 | Repeated measurements | Better comprehension of time-dependent processes and dynamic changes in symptoms. |
| 3 | Multimodal assessments | Contemporary analysis of behaviours, physiological signals, and subjective experiences. |
| 4 | Context-specific information | Assessment of symptoms as context-dependent. |
| 5 | Interactive assessments | Real-time customizable and interactive feedback. |
| 6 | Generalizability | Higher ecological validity and collection of more representative data. |