| Literature DB >> 35182377 |
Norina Gasteiger1,2, Amy Vercell1,3, Alan Davies2, Dawn Dowding1, Naz Khan4,5, Angela Davies6.
Abstract
Close relative (consanguineous) marriage is widely practised globally, and it increases the risk of genetic disorders. Mobile apps may increase awareness and education regarding the associated risks in a sensitive, engaging, and accessible manner. This systematic review of patient-facing genetic/genomic mobile apps explores content, function, and quality. We searched the NHS Apps Library and the UK Google Play and Apple App stores for patient-facing genomic/genetic smartphone apps. Descriptive information and information on content was extracted and summarized. Readability was examined using the Flesch-Kincaid metrics. Two raters assessed each app, using the Mobile App Rating Scale (MARS) and the IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics functionality score. A total of 754 apps were identified, of which 22 met the eligibility criteria. All apps intended to inform/educate users, while 32% analyzed genetic data, and 18% helped to diagnose genetic conditions. Most (68%) were clearly about genetics, but only 14% were affiliated with a medical/health body or charity, and only 36% had a privacy strategy. Mean reading scores were 35 (of 100), with the average reading age being equivalent to US grade 12 (UK year 13). On average, apps had 3.3 of the 11 IMS functionality criteria. The mean MARS quality score was 3.2 ± 0.7. Half met the minimum acceptability score (3 of 5). None had been formally evaluated. It was evident that there are few high-quality genomic/genetic patient-facing apps available in the UK. This demonstrates a need for an accessible, culturally sensitive, evidence-based app to improve genetic literacy within patient populations and specific communities.Entities:
Keywords: App review; Genes; Genetics; Genomics; Smartphone app
Year: 2022 PMID: 35182377 PMCID: PMC8941009 DOI: 10.1007/s12687-022-00579-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Genet ISSN: 1868-310X
Description of the data extraction items
| Items | Description |
|---|---|
| Descriptive information | |
| App name | Name of the mobile app |
| Version number | Version of the app reviewed |
| Developer | Name of developer |
| Market/s available | Google Play; Apple App; NHS Apps Library |
| Cost | Free to download, cost to download (in GBP); in-app purchases |
| Affiliated with a professional medical/health body or charity | Yes; no |
| Average user rating | Not rated; average number of public ratings (maximum 5 points) |
| Number of user ratings | Total number of user ratings |
| Privacy strategy | Privacy policy, login, password, two-factor authentication |
| Third-party authorizations (e.g. data sharing) | Yes; no |
| Works offline | Yes; no |
| Works in the background | Yes; no |
| Asks to enable push notifications | Yes; no |
| Content | |
| Purpose | Diagnose, record data/track, educate/inform, instruct, remind, analyse (i.e., DNA sample/test data) |
| Description | Summary of the app’s content |
| Obviously about genetics (considering name and icon) | Yes; no |
| Flesch Reading Ease | Scored 0 to 100 |
| Flesch–Kincaid Grade Level | Score corresponds with US education grade level |
| Functionality | |
| IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics functionality score | Rated 1 (present) or 0 (absent) for the following functions: (1) inform, (2) instruct, (3) record, (3.1) collect data, (3.2) share data, (3.3) evaluate, (3.4) intervene, (4) display, (5) guide, (6) remind or alert, and (7) communicate |
| Quality | |
| Mobile App Rating Scale | 19 items across four dimensions (engagement, functionality, aesthetics and information quality) rated on a 5-point Likert scale: 1 = inadequate, 2 = poor, 3 = acceptable, 4 = good, and 5 = excellent |
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart depicting the app search and screening process
Key characteristics of the 22 reviewed apps
| Characteristics | Number (%) |
|---|---|
| Purchase costs | |
| Free to download | 20 (91) |
| In-app purchases | 7 (32) |
| Costs to download | 2 (9) |
| Clearly about genetics | |
| Yes | 15 (68) |
| No | 7 (32) |
| Affiliated with health body or charity | |
| Yes | 3 (14) |
| No | 19 (86) |
| Had a privacy strategy (e.g. login, policy) | |
| Yes | 8 (36) |
| No | 14 (64) |
| Enabled third-party sharing | |
| Yes | 1 (5) |
| No | 21 (95) |
Fig. 2Radar graph showing the functions available in the reviewed genetic apps
Highest scoring patient-facing genetic apps, when considering functionality and quality
| App name | Market, cost | MARS* | IMS** | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| My Toolbox Genomics | Apple, Google Play Free to download, in-app purchases | 4.1 | 8 | Users create a personal profile. Their genetic health is then determined through results from a saliva sample. The sample is analysed for 1000 genetic areas across 5 core areas: physical, diet, vitamins, health, and psychology. The app highlights genetic deficiencies and health risks. It also provides personalised recommendations, workout, and nutrition plans |
| Muhdo | Google Play Free to download | 4.0 | 9 | This app is very similar to My Toolbox Genomics. Users create a personal profile and upload their DNA kit files. The app analyses it for 1000 genetic areas and presents a report on 5 core areas: diet, physical, vitamins, health, and psychology. The app offers a personalised genetic action plan, lifestyle tracking, meal guide, and training sessions. Users can also book an on-call doctor |
| Unlock MyDNA | Google Play Free to download, in-app purchases | 4.0 | 8 | Users create a personal profile. By using their genetic history, the app functions as a real-time personalised and predictive medical management, tracking, reporting, and notification system that alerts users to critical healthcare events (e.g. adverse events related to over 145,000 medicines/supplements). It explores over 905,000 gene variants, identifies a patient’s personality traits, inherent behaviours, physical appearance, ancestry, a potential risk for diseases, hereditary precursors, and reaction to medications. Users can also order a DNA test kit through the app |
*Overall mean score for the Mobile App Rating Scale (maximum score 5)
*IMS: overall score for the IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics functionality score (range 0–11)
Fig. 3Top: the ‘My Toolbox Genomics’ app, showing personalised recommendations, workout and nutrition plans. Middle: images of the ‘Unlock MyDNA’ app showing potential risk and efficacy of medications. Bottom: the ‘Muhdo’ app, showing lifestyle tracking, meal guide, and training session features