| Literature DB >> 34032583 |
Shahd Al-Arkee1, Julie Mason1, Deirdre A Lane2, Larissa Fabritz3, Winnie Chua3, M Sayeed Haque4, Zahraa Jalal1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adherence rates of preventative medication for cardiovascular disease (CVD) have been reported as 57%, and approximately 9% of all CVD events in Europe are attributable to poor medication adherence. Mobile health technologies, particularly mobile apps, have the potential to improve medication adherence and clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular disease; medication adherence; mobile health care applications; mobile phone; systematic review
Year: 2021 PMID: 34032583 PMCID: PMC8188316 DOI: 10.2196/24190
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) flow diagram depicting study selection.
Characteristics of the included randomized controlled trials.
| Source; country | RCTa design | Number of randomized participants | Intervention and control arm | Length of intervention | Primary and secondary outcomes measures |
| Brath et al [ | Crossover 2-arm | 77 |
Intervention: monitoring phase using app Control: control phase using paper diary | 20 weeks |
Primary: medication adherence Secondary: changes in SBPb, DBPc, HbA1cd, LDL-Ce, and usability of the app |
| Chandler et al [ | Parallel 2-arm | 54 |
Intervention: SMASHf app Control: SMS text messages on lifestyle tips unrelated to medication adherence | 9 months |
Primary: change in SBP Secondary: change in DBP, medication adherence, and patients’ satisfaction with using the app |
| Fang and Li [ | Parallel 3-arm | 280 |
Intervention: 2 arms: (1) SMS text messages using an app and (2) SMS text messages using an app plus micro letter Control: phone | 6 months |
Primary: medication adherence Secondary: none |
| Frias et al [ | Parallel 3-arm, clustered by study site | 118 |
Intervention: a DMOg system designed to provide feedback about taking medication to both patients and providers consisted of an ingestible sensor, sensor patch, and app, 2 arms: (1) 4-week DMO and (2) 2.12-week DMO Control: no system use | 12 weeks |
Primary: change in SBP Secondary: changes in SBP, DBP, HbA1c, and LDL-C; medication adherence; and satisfaction with using the app |
| Goldstein et al [ | Parallel 2×2 arm | 60 |
Intervention: 2 arms: (1) mHealthh app reminder and (2) mHealth app silent Control: 2 arms: (1) telehealth (pillbox reminder) and (2) telehealth (pillbox silent) | 28 days |
Primary: medication adherence Secondary: acceptance of the app |
| Guo et al [ | Parallel 2-arm, clustered by study site | 209 |
Intervention: mAF app Control: no app use | 3 months |
Primary: medication adherence, usability of the app, PAMi, patients’ knowledge, anticoagulation satisfaction, and QoLj Secondary: none |
| Johnston et al [ | Parallel 2-arm | 174 |
Intervention: interactive patient support tool (web-based app) Control: no app use, only simplified tool | 6 months |
Primary: medication adherence Secondary: change in SBP and LDL-C; QoL; and usability of the app |
| Kim et al [ | Parallel 2-arm | 95 |
Intervention: Wireless Self-Monitoring, an app with enrolled in the HealthyCircles Platform Control: no app use | 6 months |
Primary: medication adherence, PAM, SBP, and DBP Secondary: none |
| Labovitz et al [ | Parallel 2-arm | 28 |
Intervention: artificial intelligence app Control: no daily monitoring | 12 weeks |
Primary: medication adherence Secondary: medication adherence for patients receiving DOACsk and usability of the app |
| Liu et al [ | Parallel 2-arm | 57 |
Intervention: HeartGuardian app and weekly text messages on health education Control: weekly SMS text messages on health education | 12 weeks |
Primary: HDL-Cl, LDL-C, TCm, and triglyceride Secondary: medication adherence |
| Márquez Contreras et al [ | Parallel 2-arm, clustered by researchers | 154 |
Intervention: AlerHTA app Control: usual care in arterial hypertension | 12 months |
Primary: medication adherence Secondary: SBP and DBP |
| Mertens et al [ | Crossover 2-arm | 24 |
Intervention: medication app Control: a paper diary | 28 days |
Primary: medication adherence Secondary: user experience of the app |
| Morawski et al [ | Parallel 2-arm | 412 |
Intervention: Medisafe app Control: no intervention | 12 weeks |
Primary: medication adherence and change in SBP Secondary: SBP and DBP |
| Ni et al [ | Parallel 2-arm | 50 |
Intervention: BB app and WeChat app Control: WeChat app | 30 days |
Primary: medication adherence and heart rate, SBP, and DBP Secondary: acceptability of the app |
| Santo et al [ | Parallel 3-arm | 166 |
Intervention: 2 arms: (1) basic medication reminder app and (2) advanced medication reminder app Control: standard care as determined by patients’ physicians | 3 months |
Primary: medication adherence Secondary: BPn, TC, LDL-C, and acceptability of the app |
| Sarfo et al [ | Parallel 2-arm, clustered by physician | 60 |
Intervention: Blue-toothed UA-767Plus BT BP device and a smartphone with an embedded app Control: SMS text messages on healthy lifestyle behaviors | 3 months |
Primary: BP Secondary: medication adherence, hypertension management competence, autonomous self-regulation score for glucose control, patients’ satisfaction with using the app, side effects of antihypertensive medications, hypertension, and stroke knowledge |
aRCT: randomized controlled trial.
bSBP: systolic blood pressure.
cDBP: diastolic blood pressure.
dHbA1c: glycated hemoglobin.
eLDL-C: low-density lipoprotein cholesterol.
fSMASH: Smartphone Med Adherence Stops Hypertension.
gDMO: digital medicine offering system.
hmHealth: mobile health.
iPAM: patient activation measure.
jQoL: quality of life.
kDOAC: direct oral anticoagulant.
lHDL-C: high-density lipoprotein cholesterol.
mTC: total cholesterol.
nBP: blood pressure.
Mobile app characteristics in the included randomized controlled trials.
| Source | App name and functionality | Platform used with the app and functionality | Overall system functionality | Involvement of HCPa |
| Brath et al [ | Name not specified, referred to as a mobile phone–based data gateway. Reader and transmitter of data from electronic medication blister to a remote database | Remote telemonitoring service: data sent from the app to platform and then analyzed for timing and number of pills taken, and an automatic reminder is sent to patients via SMS text messages | Reminder | Physician |
| Chandler et al [ | SMASHb app: medication reminders via signals (blinking light, intermittent chime, automated SMS text messages, or phone call) and BPc monitor reminders via SMS text messages. The app provided timely tailored motivational and reinforcement SMS text messages based on the levels of medication adherence and SMS text message reminders to monitor BP with a Bluetooth-enabled BP device. The app also provided a cumulative table of average BP displayed in categories of daily, weekly, and/or monthly progress reports | HIPAAd-compliant servers: BP data sent from the app to platform, then analyzed for processing with timestamps, providing information for the calculation of adherence levels to the BP protocol | Reminder | Not stated |
| Fang and Li [ | Name not specified, referred to as a messaging app: medication reminders via an SMS text messaging app, educational materials via micro letter | Huaxi-gold card: the platform sent SMS text messages, images, media content related to disease and other information at regular intervals | Reminder and education | Physician and nurse |
| Frias et al [ | Proteus Discover app: reader and transmitter of the patient’s adherence data from patch to the cloud and prompted the patient to take their medication doses as scheduled. Patients could visualize their data on their mobile devices via the app | Provider web portal: provider views summaries of the DMOe data for the patients on the web portal | Reminder and education | Clinic staff, pharmacist had a role in set up (coencapsulation of ingestible sensor and medication) |
| Goldstein et al [ | Name not specified, referred to as a medication adherence app. Medication reminders provided via alert, patients could view list of medications with instructions, and they were able to record taking their medication | No platform | Reminder and education | Not stated |
| Guo et al [ | mAF app: educational app used by both patients and physicians: For patients, personal health record (CHA2DS2-VAScf, HAS-BLEDg, and SAMe-TT2R2h scores), patient educational programs (knowledge of atrial fibrillation and learn how to manage themselves at home), patient involvement in self-care items (monitor their heart rate, BP, and their quality of life), and structured follow-up consultation via a sent alert reminder. For physicians, clinical decision support | Cloud platform: data management | Education | Physician |
| Johnston et al [ | Name not specified, referred to as an interactive patient support tool app: medication reminders via SMS text messages (e-diary) to register daily ticagrelor intake. Secondary prevention educational modules (exercise module, BMI module, and BP module) | No platform | Reminder and education | Physician and nurse |
| Kim et al [ | HealthyCircles: an educational app that allowed patients and nurses to access the patient’s reading recorded on the BP monitor devices. The BP measurements are wirelessly uploaded from BP devices to the HealthyCircles account | HealthyCircles platform: the platform sent reminders for self-monitoring BP, education information about the disease condition, and general health behavior recommendations | Education | Families, caregivers, and HCPs (profession not specified) |
| Labovitz et al [ | Artificial intelligence app: medication reminders and dosing instructions via SMS text messages. Late doses generated notifications within the hour and before the end of the dosing window | Artificial intelligence platform: the platform sent an automatic SMS text message or emails to clinical staff if doses were missed, late, or based on incorrect use | Reminder | Clinic staff (profession not specified) |
| Liu et al [ | HeartGuardian app: medication reminders via SMS text messages. The app provided educational materials; medication recording and daily feedback; and self-empowerment via automatic intelligent, real-time video feedback based on the subjects’ medication adherence | No platform | Reminder and education | Not stated |
| Márquez Contreras et al [ | AlerHTA app: medication and appointments reminders via alerts. The app recorded patients’ personal data, the physician’s advice about the prescribed treatment, and the results of the BP measurement. The app recommended BP levels as objectives | No platform | Reminder and education | Physician |
| Mertens et al [ | iNephro medication plan app: medication reminders via alert, to support the drug intake needs of patients with chronic conditions on polypharmacy | No platform | Reminder | Physician |
| Morawski et al [ | Medisafe app: medication reminders via alert. The app provided alerts to remind patients when it is time to take medications and generate weekly adherence reports, the app also allowed for tracking of BP and other biometric measurements | No platform | Reminder | Not stated |
| Ni et al [ | BB reminder app and WeChat app: medication reminders via SMS text messages through the BB reminder app. Educational materials through the WeChat app | No platform | Reminder and education | Physician and nurse |
| Santo et al [ | No specified name. Referred to as a medication reminder app. Medication reminders provided via alert. In the basic app, the reminders were noninteractive and occurred 1 time only, whereas the advanced app provided interactive and customizable features including daily reminders, which could be snoozed, rescheduled, and/or marked as a taken or missed dose; medication refill reminders; adherence statistics; and ability to share information with others such as family members, if the patient missed a medication dose | No platform | Reminder | Not stated |
| Sarfo et al [ | No specified name. Referred to as medical regimen assistance app. Medication reminders provided via SMS text messages. The app reported BP measurements and medication intake and sent written and oral information on adherence criteria to take the medications within 2 hours of designated times and to measure BP every 3 days in the morning and evening | No platform | Reminder | Nurse |
aHCP: health care professional.
bSMASH: Smartphone Medication Adherence Stops Hypertension.
cBP: blood pressure.
dHIPAA: Health Insurance Portability and Accountability.
eDMO: digital medicine offering system.
fCHA2DS2-VASc: congestive heart failure, hypertension, age>75 years (doubled), type 2 diabetes mellitus, previous stroke, transient ischemic attack or thromboembolism (doubled), vascular disease, age of 65-75 years, and sex.
gHAS-BLED: Hypertension, abnormal renal or liver function, stroke, bleeding history or predisposition, labile international normalized ratio, age>65 years, drugs or alcohol concomitantly.
hSAMe-TT2R2: sex, age, medical history, treatment, tobacco use, and race.
Figure 2Meta-analysis results and forest plot of the effect of app-based interventions on medication adherence. Mean difference (95% CIs) are denoted by black boxes (black lines). The combined mean difference estimate for all studies is represented by a black diamond, where diamond width corresponds to 95% CI bounds. REML: restricted maximum likelihood.
Figure 3Authors’ judgments about each risk of bias item for each included trial. Green: low risk of bias; yellow: unclear risk of bias; red: high risk of bias.
Figure 4Authors’ judgments about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included trials.