| Literature DB >> 32549987 |
Gabrielle S Ilagan1, Evan A Iliakis1, Chelsey R Wilks2, Ipsit V Vahia1,3, Lois W Choi-Kain1,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Smartphone applications could improve symptoms of borderline personality disorder (BPD) in a scalable and resource-efficient manner in the context limited access to specialized care.Entities:
Keywords: Borderline personality disorder; Smartphone applications; Suicide; eMental health
Year: 2020 PMID: 32549987 PMCID: PMC7296633 DOI: 10.1186/s40479-020-00127-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Borderline Personal Disord Emot Dysregul ISSN: 2051-6673
Fig. 1Study selection, as specified by the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and metaanalysis (PRISMA) statement
Summary of Studies Included
| Study | App Name and Description | Control Condition | Len-gth (wks) | N, | % with BPD | Study Inclusion Criteria | Outcomes | Drop-out |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Gamified format with stimuli pairing, but only with neutral stimuli (RCT) | 4 | 31, 19.3% | NR | Community adults with active NSSI | • ↓ in all self-injurious thoughts and behaviors (SITB) except SI in app group vs. control • ↓ in self-cutting episodes (32–40%), suicide plans (21–59%), and suicidal behaviors (33–77%) | 24.4% (10) | |
| [ | 40, 26.0% | NR | 28.6% (16) | |||||
| [ | 33, 41.1% | NR | 47.6% (30) | |||||
| [ | None | ~ 10.42 | 36, 33.3% | 22.3% | Adults with elevated suicide risk in mental health treatment | • ↓ severity and intensity of SI • ↑ suicide-related coping | 38.9% (14) | |
| [ | Treatment as usual in a specialized outpatient suicide prevention clinic (RCT) | ~ 9.4 | 60, 33.3% | NR | Adults referred to treatment or evaluation for to suicidal thoughts | • ↓ in suicide risk in app group < control (only at trend level at 4-month follow up) • No between-group differences in depression | 56.7% (34) | |
| [ | None | 1 | 21, 23.9% | NR | Adults with suicidal thoughts as measured by BSS | • Non-significant ↓ in SI | 4.76% (1) | |
| [ | Twice-weekly anger management training outpatient group alone (RCT) | 6 | 28, 100% | NR | Adult armed forces veterans with high levels of STAXI-measured anger | • No differences between app group and control • ↓ anger severity and PTSD in both groups | 10.7% (3) | |
| [ | None | 1 | 12, 83% | NR | Adults with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder and history of aggression or violence. | • No change in state or trait anger | 16.7% (2) | |
| [ | None | 6 | 4 | NR | Adult armed forces veterans participating in anger management group. | • ↓ in anger, PTSD and depression symptoms at post-tx and 3-month follow-up | 25.0% (1) | |
| [ | None | 24 | 16, 0% | 100% | Adult women with BPD in specialized treatment | • ↓ aversive tension | NR | |
| [ | Printed materials about coping with suicidality + Treatment as usual (RCT) | 12 | 50, 62.1% | NR | Adult armed forces veterans in treatment with current/past-3-month SI | • Stress coping in VHB > TAU group • No between-group differences in SI, reasons for living, suicide severity, and perceived stress | 13.8% (8) | |
| [ | None | 2 | 22, 18.2% | 100% | Adults with BPD and SUD in current DBT treatment | • ↓ in emotional intensity and urges to use substances • ↓ in depression and general distress | 0% (0) | |
| [ | None | 36 | 14, 25% | 100% | Adults with BPD and recent history of NSSI and/or suicide attempts | • ↑ app use predicted larger ↓ in NSSI, but not psychopathology, suicidal behavior, or skills use | 25% (4) | |
| [ | Waitlist (RCT) | 6 | 31, 35.5% | NR | Indigenous Australian adults with past-2-week suicidal thoughts | • No between-group differences in SI, impulsivity • ↓ in depression and distress in app group > waitlist | 6.45% (2) | |
BPD Borderline personality disorder; DBT Dialectical behavior therapy, NR Not reported, NSSI Nonsuicidal self-injury, PTSD Post-traumatic stress disorder, RCT Randomized controlled trial, RELAX Remote Exercises for Learning Anger & Excitation Management, SI Suicidal ideation, SITB Self-injurious thoughts and behaviors, STAXI State-trait anger expression inventory, SUD Substance use disorder, TAU Treatment as usual, VHB Virtual Hope Box
a= standalone intervention
b= data presentation not amenable to meta-analysis
cComputed from received allocated intervention/accessed the smartphone application, from intervention condition
↓ = decrease
↑ = increase
Fig. 2Risk of bias summary
Outcome measures and groupings used in meta-analysis
| Study | App of Interest | N | Control Condition | N | Length (weeks) | Outcome measures included in meta-analysis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BPD-related outcomes | General psycho-pathology | ||||||
| [ | Virtual Hope Box (+TAU) | 50 | EUC + TAU | 55 | 12 | BRFL, BSS | PSS |
| [ | Tec Tec | 33 | Control TEC with neutral pictures | 25 | 4 | SITBI | |
| [ | 44 | 52 | 4 | ||||
| [ | 51 | 58 | 4 | ||||
| [ | RELAX (+AMT) | 28 | AMT | 30 | 6 | DAR-5, STAXI | PHQ-9 |
| [ | LifeApp’tite (+TAU) | 60 | TAU | 69 | ~ 9.4 | SSF-II-R | MDI |
| [ | Ibobbly | 31 | Waitlist | 30 | 6 | DSI-SS; BIS-11 | PHQ-9, K10 |
AMT Anger Management Treatment, BIS-11 Barratt Impulsiveness Scale-11 item, BRFL Brief Reasons for Living Inventory, BSS Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation, DAR-5 Dimensions of Anger Reactions-5, DSI-SS Depressive Symptom Inventory-Suicidality Subscale, EUC Enhanced Usual Care, K10 Kessler Psychological Distress Scale-10-item, MDI Major Depression Inventory, PHQ-9 Patient Health Questionnaire-9, PSS Perceived Stress Scale, SITBI Self-Injurious Thoughts and Behaviors Interview, SSF-II-R Suicide Status Form II-Revised, STAXI State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory, TAU Treatment as Usual
Fig. 3Forest plot of effect of smartphone applications on borderline personality disorder (BPD) symptoms. BIS-11 - Barratt Impulsiveness Scale-11 item; BRFL - Brief Reasons for Living Inventory; BSS - Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation; DAR-5 - Dimensions of Anger Reactions-5; DSI-SS - Depressive Symptom Inventory-Suicidality Subscale; SITBI - Self-Injurious Thoughts and Behaviors Interview; SSF-II-R - Suicide Status Form II-Revised