| Literature DB >> 34783674 |
Siew Min Ang1, Juliana Chen2, Jia Huan Liew3, Jolyn Johal4, Yock Young Dan5, Margaret Allman-Farinelli2, Su Lin Lim1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Smartphone apps have shown potential in enhancing weight management in Western populations in the short to medium term. With a rapidly growing obesity burden in Asian populations, researchers are turning to apps as a service delivery platform to reach a larger target audience to efficiently address the problem.Entities:
Keywords: Asian; adults; diet; meta-analysis; mobile app; mobile phone; obesity; physical activity; systematic review; weight loss
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34783674 PMCID: PMC8663646 DOI: 10.2196/28185
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. CENTRAL: Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. CINAHL: Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature.
Characteristics of the interventions incorporating apps included in the review (N=21).
| Author (year), country, ethnicity | Study characteristics, sample size (included in analysis) | Participant characteristics | App characteristic (name), cultural adaptation within app | Measured outcomes | Attrition rate (%) |
| Bender et al [ | Pilot RCTa, Filipino Americans who were overweight or obese and aged ≥18 years at risk of T2DMb or prediabetes, 3 months, n=67 | Mean age, years (SD): 41.7 (12.0), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): 30.5 (4.4), women (%): 52.2 | Multicomponent, commercial (Fitbit), English, no | Weight, BMI, waist circumference, FPGc, and HbA1cd level | 5; Ie: 6; Cf: 3 |
| Dong et al [ | RCT, patients with T2DM aged 18-60 years, 12 months, n=120 (119) | Mean age, years (SD): 42.7 (6.7), BMI ≥25 kg/m2: I (%): 48.3, C (%): 42.4, women (%): 47.9 | Multicomponent, commercial (WeChat), Chinese, yes | FPG, 2-hour PGg, HbA1c level, total self-efficacy score, diet score, exercise score, medication-taking score, blood glucose–monitoring score, foot-care score, and smoking score | 0 |
| Dorje et al [ | RCT, patients with coronary heart disease aged ≥18 years, 2 months intervention+4 months step-down phase, n=312 | Mean age, years (SD): 60.5 (9.2), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): I: 25.5 (3.0), C: 25.4 (3.5), women (%): 19 | Multicomponent, commercial (WeChat), Chinese, yes | Weight, BMI, waist-to-hip ratio, 6-minute walk test, knowledge and awareness of coronary heart disease, PG, lipids, psychosocial well-being, quality of life, smoking status, dietary habits, and physical activity | 15; I: 14; C: 16 |
| Kaur et al [ | Cluster RCT, adults aged 35-70 years, 6 months, n=732 | Mean age, years (SD not reported): 52.7, mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): I: 27.03 (4.2), C: 27.45 (4.8), women (%): 76.1 | Multicomponent, commercial (WhatsApp), English, Hindi, and Punjabi, emails in English, yes | Weight, BMI, dietary intake changes, ASEh score, BPi, FPG, and lipids | 9; I: 8; C: 10 |
| Kim et al [ | Multicenter RCT, stable patients with T2DM aged 19-80 years with HbA1c level between 7% and 10%, 24 weeks, n=191 (172) | Mean age, years (SD): I: 60.0 (8.4), C: 56.7 (9.1), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): I: 25.5 (3.2), C: 25.8 (4.1), women (%): I: 44, C: 52 | Multicomponent, researcher design (mDiabetes), Korean, yes | Weight, body composition, score of the summary of diabetes self-care activities, World Health Organization quality-of-life scale, HbA1c level, lipids, and BP | 21 |
| Lee et al [ | Multicenter pilot RCT, university medical school students who were overweight or obese with metabolic syndrome, 24 weeks, n=422 (324) | Age: ≥20 years, mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): inactive I: 28.8 (2.72), C: 29.1 (3.10), moderately active I: 29.8 (4.39), C: 29.0 (2.46), health-enhancing physically active I: 29.3 (2.90), C: 29.8 (7.12), women (%): I: 52, C: 48 | Multicomponent, researcher design (SmartCare), Korean, app is in English, yes | Weight, BMI, waist circumference, body composition, BP, FPG, HbA1c level, and lipids | 23; I: 17; C: 30 |
| Lee et al [ | Pilot RCT, patients aged 20-65 years with colorectal polyps diagnosis within the last 2 years of the study, 3 months, n=65 | Mean age, years (SD): I: 49.1 (8.3), C: 50.7 (8.1), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): I: 26.9 (3.4), C: 24.5 (3.9), women (%): I: 34.4, C: 45.5 | Multicomponent, commercial (Noom), English or Korean (NFSj), no | Weight, changes in dietary intake through food frequency questionnaire, and Godin leisure-time exercise questionnaire | 3; I: 0; C: 6 |
| Lim et al [ | RCT, patients who were overweight or obese with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and were aged 21-70 years, 6 months, n=108 | Mean age, years (SD): I: 46.8 (11.1), C: 46.2 (10.1), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): I: 30.1 (4.0), C: 30.8 (4.8), women (%): I: 42, C: 32 | Multicomponent, researcher design (nBuddy), English, yes | Weight, BMI, waist circumference, BP, and liver enzymes | 6; I: 9; C: 4 |
| Muralidharan et al [ | Multicenter RCT, adults who were overweight or obese aged 20-65 years with prediabetes, 12 weeks, n=741 (561) | Mean age, years (SD): I: 37.8 (9.2), C: 37.8 (9.6), mean BMI not reported, only baseline weight was reported, women (%): I: 43.9, C: 42.1 | Multicomponent, researcher design (mDiab), English, yes | Weight, target 5% weight loss | 24; I: 28; C: 21 |
| Oh et al [ | Multicenter RCT, adults who were obese aged 20-70 years with BMI≥25 kg/m2 and metabolic syndrome diagnosis, 24 weeks, n=422 (334) | Mean age, years (SD): I: 46.78 (13.11), C: 50.35 (14.24), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): I: 29.42 (3.53), C: 29.40 (3.39), women (%): I: 46.7, C: 51.4 | Multicomponent, researcher design (SmartCare), Korean, app is in English, yes | Weight, BMI, waist circumference, body composition, change in diet habit, change in physical activity (IPAQk), and patient satisfaction | 21; I: 15; C: 27 |
| Shin et al [ | Pilot RCT, men who were overweight or obese aged 19-45 years with BMI≥27 kg/m2, 12 weeks, n=105 (98) | Mean age, years (SD): 27.8 (5.0), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): 29.8 (2.7), women: 0 | Multicomponent, researcher design (Fit.Life), Korean, app is in English, yes | Weight, BMI, body composition, physical activity changes (IPAQ), calorie intake changes, BP, FPG, lipids, and liver enzymes | 7; C: 9; I1: 3; I2: 9 |
| Suen et al [ | Feasibility RCT, healthy adults who were overweight or obese aged ≥18 years with BMI≥25 kg/m2 without ear injuries, 8 weeks, n=59 | Mean age, years (SD): 49.15 (10.54), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): 30.35 (4.53), women (%): 85 | Multicomponent, researcher Design (Auricular Acupressure for Weight Reduction version 1), Chinese, yes | Weight, BMI, body composition, waist and hip circumference, blood leptin and adiponectin, fullness rating, and patient satisfaction | 10; C: 5; I: 11 |
| Tanaka et al [ | RCT, adults who were overweight, obese, or abdominally obese aged 20-64 years with cardiometabolic risk factors or metabolic syndrome, 8 weeks intervention+4 weeks postintervention follow-up, n=112 | Mean age, years (SD): I: 45.6 (10.2), C: 47.8 (9.3), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): I: 28.0 (3.3), C: 28.2 (3.0), women (%): 0.9 | Single-component, commercial (FiNC), Japanese yes | Weight, waist circumference, BP, lipids, HbA1c level, and obesogenic eating behaviors | 28; I: 32; C:18 |
| Yang et al [ | Crossover RCT, patients who were overweight or obese with BMI≥24 kg/m2 and metabolic abnormalities, 3 months intervention+crossover 3 months usual care, n=53 (46) | Mean age, years (SD): 33.2 (9.6), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): I: 27.2 (3.4), C: 30.3 (4.9), women (%): I: 61.5, C: 59.2 | Multicomponent, researcher design (self-monitoring app), NFS (Line, social communication app), NFS on app, Chinese and English noted on website, yes | Weight, BMI, waist circumference, change in physical activity, FPG, BP, and lipids | 13; I: 19; C: 7 |
| Yang et al [ | Cluster RCT, adults aged ≥18 years with T2DM for ≥1 year and HbA1c level 7%-10%, 12 weeks, n=247 (239) | Mean age, years (SD): I: 54.1 (10.1), C: 60.6 (10.2), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): I: 26.3 (3.7), C: 25.7 (3.9), women (%): I: 46.6, C: 53.6 | Multicomponent, researcher design (HiCare smart K), Korean, yes | Weight (not mandatory), BMI, waist circumference, BP, lipids, HbA1c level, FPG, Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire, and medication adherence scale | 3; I: 3; C: 3 |
| Zhang et al [ | RCT, adults aged 18-65 years, diagnosed with diabetes for more than 6 months and with HbA1c level ≥8%, 6 months, n=234 (194) | Mean age, years (SD): 53 (11), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): 25.03 (3.36), women (%): 38 | Multicomponent, commercial (Welltang), Chinese, yes | Weight, BMI, BP, waist circumference, FPG, HbA1c level, lipids, and liver enzymes | 17; C: 19; I1: 14; I2: 18 |
| Zhou et al [ | Pilot RCT, adults aged 18-74 years with diagnosed diabetes without severe complications, 3 months, n=100 | Mean age, years (SD): I: 55.0 (13.1), C: 53.5 (12.4), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): I: 23.04 (4.09), C: 23.01 (4.04), women (%): I: 46, C: 40 | Multicomponent, commercial (Welltang), Chinese, yes | Weight, BMI, waist and hip circumference, diabetes knowledge and self-care behavior score, HbA1c level, FPG, 2-hour PG, BP, and low-density lipoprotein-c | Not reported |
| He et al [ | Cohort-based non-RCT, general population aged ≥18 years who were keen on weight loss, 6 months, n=15,818 (15,310) | Mean age, years (SD): I: 35.1 (8.5), C: 39.0 (9.5), mean BMI not reported, women (%): I: 66.5, C: 40.5 | Single-component, commercial (WeChat), Chinese, yes | Weight and waist circumference | 3; I: 4; C: 2 |
| Kim et al [ | Matched controlled non-RCT, adults aged 20-70 years with T2DM for more than 1 year with HbA1c level 7%-10% at baseline, 3 months, n=73 (70) | Mean age, years (SD): I: 51.8 (10.3), C: 53.8 (9.0), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): I: 25.0 (3.3), C: 24.9 (3.4), women (%): 49.2 | Multicomponent, NFS, likely researcher design (Mobile SmartCare, version 1.0.7), Korean, yes | BMI, BP, HbA1c level, lipids, and patient satisfaction | 4; I: 8; C: 0 |
| Kim et al [ | Cohort-based non-RCT, control: individuals with metabolic abnormalities according to the Adult Treatment Panel III criteria, intervention: individuals recruited from among those who had previously completed a 24-week mobile service program as part of the First Year Public Health Center Mobile Healthcare pilot project, 24 weeks, n=1117 | Mean age, years (SD): I: 44.68 (8.22), C: 44.69 (8.22), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): I: 25.71 (3.34), C: 25.18 (3.48), women (%): I: 50.8, C: 65.5 | Multicomponent, researcher design (Public Health Center mHealth app), Korean, yes | Health behavior scores, mini–dietary assessment scores, BP, FPG, triglycerides, high density lipoprotein-c, and waist circumference | Not reported |
| Wijaya and Widiantoro [ | Pretest-posttest design, Indonesian international students aged ≥20 years who owned a smartphone with internet access, not participating in other training program, and literate in English, 10 weeks, n=75 (70) | Mean age, years (SD): 25.86 (4.33), mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD): 23.25 (3.05), women (%): 45.7 | Multicomponent, researcher Design (iNCKU smartphone app) English, yes | Body weight, BMI, BP, physical fitness, physical activity measures (step count, distance covered, caloric expenditure, and time spent on activity), self-efficacy, social support, and outcome expectation | 7; I: 8; C: 5 |
aRCT: randomized controlled trial.
bT2DM: type 2 diabetes mellitus.
cFPG: fasting plasma glucose.
dHbA1c: glycated hemoglobin.
eI: intervention.
fC: control.
gPG: plasma glucose.
hASE: attitude, social influence, and self-efficacy.
iBP: blood pressure.
jNFS: not further specified.
kIPAQ: International Physical Activity Questionnaire.
Description and primary outcome of the interventions included in the review (N=21).
| Author (year), country, ethnicity, study design | Intervention | Health staff involvement | Control treatment | Change in weight or weight-related outcomes |
| Bender et al [ | Fit&Trim, a DPPb-based, culturally adapted, mobile phone–based weight loss lifestyle intervention delivered by Filipino research staff, augmented with tracker Fitbit Zip and private Facebook virtual support group. Provided individual tailored goals for weight, diet, physical activity or steps, and encouraged to monitor lifestyle habits and progress on app | Baseline+5 in-person Fit&Trim education intervention office visits | Active waitlist. Received Fitbit Zip physical activity tracker with 2 education sessions on hepatitis A and B | Weight change (kg) calculated: Ic: –3.39, Cd: –0.82, SD or further values not reported, achieved 5% weight loss: I: 36%, C: 6%, large effect of 0.93 (Cohen |
| Dong et al [ | Received conventional health education with nursing care for diabetes. Patients received multimedia-type diabetes-related knowledge from nurses on app. Able to communicate with educators and friends on app. Phone reviews on app use and hospital physical examination offered | Baseline visit and 6-month and 12-month visits, nurses communicating with patients through WeChat | Conventional health education with nursing care for diabetes | There was no significant difference in BMI between groups at baseline, 6 months, and 12 months. No further values reported |
| Dorje et al [ | Received usual care+SMART-CR/SPe program. During the intensive phase, participants received 4 educational cartoon modules per week through WeChat. In the step-down phase, participants received only 2 cartoon pictures with key motivational message per week; Cartoon education touched on cardiovascular health and disease, physical activity, healthy nutritional advice, support for medication adherence, psychological well-being, and modification risk factors; Individualized feedback, recommendations, and remote supervision were provided based on regular reviews of monitoring data. Coach support available on app for health and lifestyle advice. Additional alerts and WeChat messages were sent when measurements were outside target blood pressure or steps | Baseline, 2-month, and 6-month visits for measurements and assessments by blinded researchers. Remote supervision through messages, telemonitoring, feedback, and video calls from coaches as necessary based on regular reviews of data | Standard care provided by doctors with a brief education carried out by a nurse. Medication management and ad hoc review visits to a cardiologist or other health care providers according to the patient’s self-assessment of their own cardiovascular health; WeChat used for sending review visit reminders, did not receive any form of health information or intervention | BMI change (kg/m2), mean (SD), baseline: I: 25.5 (3.0), C: 25.4 (3.5), 2 months: I: 25.0 (2.9), C: 25.2 (3.2), between-groups |
| Kaur et al [ | Provision of | Single home visit to provide education and guide family champions on how to use the different components of the intervention; No further face-to-face interaction. Further advice and supervision was conducted through the website | Pictorial pamphlet on the dietary recommendations with information written in Hindi language. Asked to read the pamphlet in their own time, make changes to their diet accordingly, and convey the same information to their family members; Same educational content and materials were offered to intervention group | Weight change (kg), mean (95% CI; SD not reported), 6 months: I: –0.42 (–0.8 to –0.1) |
| Kim et al [ | Participants were divided into 4 groups based on antidiabetic treatment. Nil baseline education. Provided individualized targets for diet and physical activity at baseline. Encouraged to monitor blood glucose levels and lifestyle habits on app and informed that physicians can view and monitor their progress through telemonitoring. App provided immediate feedback according to an algorithm when a reading on blood glucose level, food intake, or activity was entered. Detailed information on diet and physical activity was made available through a range of educational and interactive component on app. Social networking service and bulletin board enabled users to share experiences and tips with each other, whereas research staff could answer questions from patients | Baseline, 2 in-person visits (week 12 and week 24), and 2 phone call reviews. Remote supervision and advice provided on app as well | Nil baseline education. Provided logbook to record blood glucose readings, Bluetooth glucometer, test strips, and a printed education booklet. Received 2 in-person visits at 12 weeks and 24 weeks | Weight change (kg), mean (SD), baseline to 6 months: I: 67.7 (11.8) to 67.1 (11.6), |
| Lee et al [ | Provided with a smartphone equipped with SmartCare app and Bluetooth-enabled bioimpedance analyzer. Instructed to monitor body composition, data were transmitted to the SmartCare system through the app; Health reports were automatically created based on the personal health information of participants according to the clinical decision support system algorithm function of the SmartCare system. Health managers provided prevention, consultation, and educational services remotely to participants based on health reports through messages and weekly emails. Monthly progress evaluation was offered along with in-person consultation with a physician at least once every 2 months (follow-up study by Oh et al [ | Baseline, 2-monthly in-person visits with physician. Measurements at baseline, week 12, and week 24. Weekly remote supervision over app | Provided with weighing scale and pedometer and asked to record weight and physical activity steps progress in a diary. Offered 3 in-person visits at baseline, week 12, and week 24. No further visit details | Weight change (kg), mean (SD) 6 months, insufficiently active: C: –0.1 (1.94), |
| Lee et al [ | Received app and taught to use under supervision during first visit without further education. Health-related information, lifestyle recommendations, and feedback sent through app; Encouraged to track lifestyle habits on app, and users may mutually compete and share progress on the bulletin board. Monthly phone interview to assess the proper use of the app and provide motivation | In-person session to download and teach the app use during baseline visit. Measurement taken at baseline and 3 months; Nil further face-to-face interaction. Monthly phone calls (2 calls) | Received a diary to record food intake and exercise. Staff members provided health behavior change education at baseline visit; Health-related newsletters sent monthly, containing the same information about behavior as those received by the experimental group. Received monthly phone interview motivation and review | Weight change (kg), mean (SD) 3 months: I: –1.25 (1.14), |
| Lim et al [ | Guided on the use of the app and educated on dietary and physical activity modification through a 1-hour face-to-face session with the research dietitian at the first study visit. Set individualized weight and lifestyle goals on the app. Advised to monitor lifestyle and progress on app. Educational videos and daily tips on healthy lifestyle available on app. Reminders and push notifications in place for meal and weight logging. Remote coaching with dietitians on progress, received encouragement and advice on app. Provided weighing scale | 1-hour individual face-to-face education session with the research dietitian at baseline visit; Remote dietitian coaching on app; 2 optional workshops; Measurements at baseline, 3-month, and 6-month visits | Counseled individually for 30-40 minutes on diet and exercise by a nurse practitioner during baseline visit. Healthy food plate, physical activity, and the importance of weight loss are key areas of focus during the counseling. Provided weighing scale | Weight change (kg), mean (SD), 3 months: C: –0.8 (2.1), I: –3.2 (3.1), between-groups |
| Muralidharan et al [ | Received app at baseline visit. App offered reality television show video lessons to educate and encourage lifestyle behavior tracking and change. Video lessons highlighted challenges and suitable solutions. Automatic motivational messages offered according to user's progress, alerts to prompt tracking, quizzes to reinforce learning, and message function to chat with coaches. Coaches provided weekly calls to revisit topics and emailed reports | Baseline visit to download app, weekly coach calls, emails, and text messages. Remote coach support through app chat. Measurements at baseline and 12-week visit | Received standard care that included a brochure on healthy eating, weight loss, and exercise at baseline visit. Offered face-to-face counseling with nutritionist | Weight change (kg), mean, 3 months: I: –1.1, within-group |
| Oh et al [ | Received information on increasing physical activity and controlling diet habits. Provided mobile phones for remote monitoring, body composition monitors, and pedometers. Advised to weigh daily or minimally 3 times weekly. Data were transmitted to the central server for immediate feedback through the designed algorithm. Received weekly, monthly health reports on progress through app; Provided phone consultations by educated consultants on disease management, health education, exercise, medication, and proper nutrition | Baseline visit, 12-week, and 24-week measurement visits. Remote app support and phone consultations by educated consultants | Received basic information on increasing physical activity and controlling diet habits at baseline visit. Body weight scales and pedometers were provided along with body weight journal for self-recording of weight and waist circumference; Returned for 2 in-person visits for measurements, consultations with physicians, and received advice about their nutrition and exercise | Weight change (kg), mean (SD) 6 months: I: –2.21 (3.60), |
| Shin et al [ | Received a 5-minute face-to-face education on diet and exercise from a nurse with standardized education material (1200 kcal sample menu), exercise recommendations, and behavior modification. Offered Fit.Life wireless physical activity tracker with Bluetooth transmission and detailed instructions on activity tracker use with demonstration and handouts. Provided clear activity goals and advised to track activity on app; Additional features for tracking progress to hit financial goals; Intervention I1: app, intervention I2: app+financial incentives | Baseline visit for 5-minute education, detailed demonstration, and instruction on app use; 4 measurement visits (baseline, week 4, week 8, and week 12) | Received a 5-minute face-to-face education on diet and exercise from a trained nurse. Content included the clinical consequence of obesity, a dietary recommendation for weight loss with an example of a 1200 kcal sample diet menu, and a physical activity recommendation with specification of frequency, intensity, time, and type | Weight change (kg), mean (SD) 3 months: I2 (app + financial incentives): –3.1 (3.7), I1 (app): –1.1 (2.9), C: –0.4 (2.5), |
| Suen et al [ | Received coaching on applying auricular acupressure with instructions on frequency of application. Return demonstration was required to ensure proper treatment. Information booklet and mobile app provided. App provided daily reminders for self-pressing, encouraged compliance, and tracking of self-pressing and bowel movement; App provided relevant multimedia information and precaution on auricular acupressure. Users could communicate with researchers through app and were reminded of return visit dates on app | Researchers met patients twice weekly to change tapes. Remote communication and advice provided on app if patients had questions or problems | Received coaching on applying auricular acupressure with instructions on frequency of application. Return demonstration was required to ensure proper treatment; Information booklet provided. Patients were requested to manually record the frequency of daily pressing and bowel movement. Researchers met patients twice weekly to change tapes | Weight change (kg), mean, 8 weeks: C: –1.33, |
| Tanaka et al [ | Assigned to a group with up to 6 members where users could share meal photos in the group chat of the culturally tailored app, FiNC, and receive direct feedback, instructions, advice, and encouragement from a nutrition professional. Users could also communicate with other users for social support. Specific FiNC-method dietary recommendations were provided without any calorie restriction. Self-monitoring and group learning were encouraged on the app | Baseline, 8-week, and 12-week in-person measurements. No further human intervention. Remote communication with certified nutrition professional through app | Nil intervention provided during the 12-week waitlist period (Controls received intervention afterward for 8 weeks) | Weight change, mean (95% CI), 8 weeks: I: –1.4 (–2.0 to –0.8), C: –0.1 (–0.6 to 0.4), between-groups |
| Yang et al [ | Received mobile physical activity promotion tool inclusive of lifestyle counseling, professional personal counseling, constructive feedback, health information, individualized reminder message at least once a week through Line app and email. A self-monitoring app with mobile activity sensor was provided along with an interactive internet webpage where users could track their health, compare results with peers, and receive recommendations | Lifestyle counseling at baseline, minimal human contact; Remote coaching on app and sending of reminder messages at least once weekly through Line and email; Baseline, 12-week, and 24-week in-person measurement visits | Received lifestyle counseling and booklet containing health education in support of behavioral and educational advice for diet control, increased physical activity, less smoking and drinking, stress, and regular health examination. Information on the related risk factors, development and prevention of metabolic syndrome, and various websites were also provided to the patients | Weight change (kg), mean (SD), 6 months, with activity promotion system: pre–activity promotion system: 77.7 (15.1), post–activity promotion system: 76.4 (15.5), pre–usual care: 78.1 (16.6), post–usual care: 76.8 (15.8), between-groups |
| Yang et al [ | Physicians provided education on the use of the medical instruments and smartphone app. Explained management targets and guidelines to patients. Provided glucometer, test strips, and electronic manometer monitoring. Users were asked to upload their daily SMBGf results, other biometric information, and weight through the app; Data automatically transmitted to the main server where physicians could check the results through a website and send feedback messages (praise, encouragement, feedback, and advice) at least once per week. Additional direct phone calls were conducted as required. Monthly face-to-face consultations offered | Baseline education on instruments, smartphone app, management targets and guidelines. Weekly feedback message through website or additional calls as necessary. Monthly in-person consultations to review progress, measurements, and management | Visited the private clinics and received face-to-face consultations every month for review and measurements | Weight change (kg), mean (95% CI), 3 months: I: −0.63 (−1.02 to −0.24), C: −0.88 (−2.65 to 0.90), adjusted mean difference to control: 0.22 (−1.26 to 1.71), between-groups |
| Zhang et al [ | Group I1: app (basic), received basic diabetes education, including diet control, adequate exercise, SMBG, and regular review. Provided with glucose meter, test strips, and targets and encouraged to track BGg, habits, and obtain diabetes-related knowledge through the app. Users could contact clinicians by phone or app; Group I2: app, interactive group I1 intervention+third-party professional diabetes health care team comprising a dietitian and a health manager. Health team provided feedback and recommendations on progress, BG, and lifestyle habits. Provided daily prompts (first month) and then monthly on the app by health care team and reviewed weekly glucose reports. Users were given BG targets and were able to contact clinicians by phone or app | Baseline, 3-month, and 6-month measurement visits, ability to contact clinicians on the web through app or phone. Group I1 received support from a clinician, group I2 had additional interactive support on app with web-based management health care team comprising a dietitian and a health manager | Provided basic education. Patients obtained diabetes-related knowledge and skills by self-learning and summarizing, and they adopted lifestyles and behaviors voluntarily. Equipped with a designated BG meter and test strips, patients were advised to record results in a logbook. They could contact clinicians through phone | Weight change (kg), mean (SD), baseline: C: 69.6 (10.0), I1 (app, basic): 72.3 (11.6), I2 (app with health team): 70.8 (11.9), 3 months: C: 69.6 (9.6), I1: 72.2 (11.9), I2: 70.9 (11.6), 6 months: C: 69.4 (9.9), I1: 72.0 (11.7), I2: 71.0 (11.6); There were no significant differences among the 3 groups for body weight at both 3 and 6 months |
| Zhou et al [ | Downloaded the Welltang app at baseline visit and received diabetic knowledge on diet, exercise, medicine, blood glucose monitoring, and the latest guidelines for diabetes care. Users were asked to monitor 7-point finger blood glucose level for 1 day every 1-2 weeks (prompts in place) and track lifestyle habits. Advice on progress, values, target goals, and medication were offered by clinicians or study team through app once a week or fortnight. Users could communicate with clinicians through app, and an electronic action plan facilitated clinic review | Baseline, 1-month, 2-month, and 3-month in-person consultations. Remote interaction with clinicians on app as necessary. Weekly or fortnightly feedback from clinicians | Monthly visits to see physician to review blood glucose readings through logbooks. Patients were asked to monitor their 7-point finger capillary blood glucose level with a blood glucose meter 1-3 days before each clinic attendance to facilitate medication regimen adjustments | Weight change (kg), mean (SD), baseline: I: 62.4 (12.8), C: 62.5 (12.8), 3 months: I: 62.2 (11.0), C: 62.7 (12.1), |
| He et al [ | Received an official WeChat account for self-monitoring and immediate feedback on lifestyle habits. Users communicated and competed on weight loss progress. Users received scores for interactions, feedback information, or activity on the app, and top scorers were rewarded. Multimedia information on weight loss and an expert consulting group in place to answer questions | Nil baseline education or in-person session; 2 weight managers per work organization were trained to obtain participants’ data on height, weight, and waist circumference before and after the interventions were initiated for both groups. Remote communication with experts through app | Routine publicity, such as the slogan “Take the stairs and lose weight,” was provided to the control group. No further details specified | Weight change (kg), mean (SD): I: –2.09 (3.43), C: –1.78 (2.96), mean weight loss between the 2 groups for men was significant based on the stratification of age and educational level, weight loss changes were not significant for women |
| Kim et al [ | Baseline data recorded were transmitted to the app at first visit. Thereafter, users self-measured blood pressure and blood glucose levels, and data were automatically transmitted to hospital or medical staff through the app. Medical staff analyzed the data and sent tailored feedback to the patient once per week on average; App provided warning messages and advice when blood glucose levels were too high or too low. Study staff called users if they had hypoglycemia or no data were recorded | Nil baseline education. Measurement visits at baseline and 12 weeks. Remote supervision and weekly coaching on app. Staff called users if they had hypoglycemia or no data were recorded | Standard care, not clearly reported in paper | BMI change (kg/m2), mean (SD), baseline: I: 25.0 (3.3), C: 24.9 (3.4), 3 months: I: 25.0 (3.4), within-group |
| Kim et al [ | Received face-to-face counseling service at public health center from physician, nutritionist, exercise specialist, and nurse at baseline, 12 weeks, and 24 weeks. Offered activity monitors, sphygmomanometers, glucometers, body composition measuring devices, and app for self-monitoring. Instructed to sync activity at least 5 times weekly and upload meal pictures once a month. Remote weekly individualized service related to healthy lifestyles was provided by health professionals along with monthly reports. Access to web-based communities for each health center facilitated consultations; Received intensive nutritional consultations at health centers based on meal photos (Rewards such as mobile gift cards were offered to users with excellent performances, but this was not duly reported in the | Baseline, 12-week, and 24-week consultations and measurements. Weekly individualized advice and services related to lifestyle habits provided by physicians, nurses, nutritionists, and physical activity experts who monitored health information on the web in real time; Intensive nutrition consultations at each visit to health center | After classification according to test results, tailored care plans were established. Face-to-face counseling services offered at public health center by team comprising a health manager (a health expert such as a physician or nurse), nutritionist, and certified exercise expert, who provided individual or group health consultation (consultations adhered to the 2011 One-Stop Health Service Consultation Manual) | BMI measured at baseline but not reported in results. Change in proportion of patients with metabolic risk factor (elevated waist circumference) according to Adult Treatment Panel III criteria: I: –62 male patients, I: –78 female patients, significant difference within group for both genders, C: –2 male patients, C: –20 female patients, significant difference within female group only. No significant difference between groups |
| Wijaya and Widiantoro [ | The intervention group received Social Cognitive Theory skill-building by WGTCh for a 10-week program. The participants formed teams of 3 or 4 members based on friendship, received a booklet that provided physical activity–related knowledge, and were offered a 50-minute guidance on watch and app use at baseline. Individual and group performances were shown in the WGTC of the webpage where information was automatically transmitted by the iNCKU watches and the smartphone apps through daily use | Nil baseline education. Provision of items, booklet, guidance on use and purpose of study at baseline. Measurements at baseline and 10 weeks. No further human contact | Received explanation for the purposes of the study and a booklet that provided physical activity–related knowledge | Weight change (kg), mean (SD), baseline: I: 59.04 (65.44), C: 58.11 (66.83), 10 weeks: I: 57.78 (64.30), C: 57.92 (66.70), between-groups |
aRCT: randomized controlled trial.
bDPP: diabetes prevention program.
cI: intervention.
dC: control.
eSMART-CR/SP: Smartphone and Social Media–Based Cardiac Rehabilitation and Secondary Prevention.
fSMBG: self-monitoring blood glucose.
gBG: blood glucose.
hWGTC: web-based game with team competition.
Risk of bias within the randomized controlled trials for selection, performance, and detection bias domains (N=17).
| Author, year, country | Selection bias (random sequence generation) | Selection bias (allocation concealment) | Performance bias | Detection bias (self-reported outcomes) | Detection bias (objective measures) |
| Bender et al [ | Low risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Low risk | Low risk |
| Dong et al [ | Low risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Dorje et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Low risk |
| Kaur et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Kim et al [ | High risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Lee et al [ | Low risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Lee et al [ | Low risk | Unclear risk | High risk | High risk | Unclear risk |
| Lim et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | High risk | Low risk | Unclear risk |
| Muralidharan et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk | Unclear risk |
| Oh et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Shin et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Suen et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Low risk |
| Tanaka et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Low risk |
| Yang et al [ | Low risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Yang et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| Zhang et al [ | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Low risk | Unclear risk |
| Zhou et al [ | Low risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
Risk of bias within the randomized controlled trials for attrition, reporting, other, and overall bias domains (N=17).
| Author, year, country | Attrition bias | Reporting bias | Other bias | Overall bias |
| Bender et al [ | High risk | Low risk | High risk | High risk |
| Dong et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Moderate risk |
| Dorje et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
| Kaur et al [ | Low risk | High risk | Unclear risk | High risk |
| Kim et al [ | High risk | Low risk | High risk | High risk |
| Lee et al [ | High risk | Low risk | High risk | High risk |
| Lee et al [ | Low risk | Low Risk | Low risk | High risk |
| Lim et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Moderate risk |
| Muralidharan et al [ | High risk | Unclear risk | High risk | High risk |
| Oh et al [ | Unclear risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Moderate risk |
| Shin et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Moderate risk |
| Suen et al [ | Low risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Moderate risk |
| Tanaka et al [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Moderate risk |
| Yang et al [ | High risk | Unclear risk | High risk | High risk |
| Yang et al [ | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk | Moderate risk |
| Zhang et al [ | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk | Moderate risk |
| Zhou et al [ | Unclear risk | Low risk | Low risk | Moderate risk |
Risk of bias within the non-RCTsa (N=4).
|
| Author, year, country | |||
|
| He et al [ | Kim et al [ | Kim et al [ | Wijaya and Widiantoro [ |
| Study design | Cohort-based non-RCT | Matched controlled non-RCT | Cohort based non-RCT | Pretest-posttest design |
| Bias due to confounding | Moderate risk | Serious risk | Critical risk | Moderate risk |
| Bias in selection of patients into the study | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
| Bias in classification of interventions | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
| Bias due to deviations from intended interventions | Moderate risk | Moderate risk | Serious risk | Low risk |
| Bias due to missing data | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
| Bias in measurement of outcomes | Moderate risk | Serious risk | Moderate risk | Moderate risk |
| Bias in selection of the reported result | Moderate risk | Moderate risk | Moderate risk | Moderate risk |
| Overall bias | Moderate risk | Serious risk | Critical risk | Moderate risk |
aRCT: randomized controlled trial.
Figure 2Forest plot showing the pooled effects of the interventions that incorporate apps on weight change. RE: random effects; SMD: standardized mean difference.
Figure 3Forest plot showing the pooled effects of interventions combining usual care with app (intervention) versus usual care alone (control) on weight change. RE: random effects; SMD: standardized mean difference.