| Literature DB >> 35225940 |
Alexandra Turnbull1, Dean Sculley2, Derek Santos1,3, Mohammed Maarj1, Lachlan Chapple1, Xavier Gironès4, Antoni Fellas1, Andrea Coda1,5.
Abstract
The advancement of digital health provides strategic and cost-effective opportunities for the progression of health care in children and adolescents. It is important for clinicians to be aware of the potential of emerging pain outcome measures and employ evidence-based tools capable of reliably tracking acute and chronic pain over time. The main emerging pain outcome measures for children and adolescents were examined. Overall, seven main texts and their corresponding digital health technologies were included in this study. The main findings indicated that the use of emerging digital health is able to reduce recall bias and can improve the real time paediatric data capture of acute and chronic symptoms. This literature review highlights new developments in pain management in children and adolescents and emphasizes the need for further research to be conducted on the use of emerging technologies in pain management. This may include larger scale, multicentre studies to further assess validity and reliability of these tools across various demographics. The privacy and security of mHealth data must also be carefully evaluated when choosing health applications that can be introduced into daily clinical settings.Entities:
Keywords: VAS; adolescent; app; children; digital health; eHealth; eVAS; mHealth; pain; progression; symptoms
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35225940 PMCID: PMC8884018 DOI: 10.3390/medsci10010006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3271
Search Strategy.
| 1 | Pain outcome measure |
| 2 | Pain assess * |
| 3 | Pain measurem * |
| 4 | 1 or 2 or 3 |
| 5 | Child * |
| 6 | Adolescent.tw |
| 7 | 5 or 6 |
| 8 | Electronic * |
| 9 | Smartphone |
| 10 | Smart device |
| 11 | Smart-technolog * |
| 12 | 8 or 9 or 10 or 11 |
| 13 | Validation |
| 14 | Feasibility |
| 15 | 13 or 14 |
| 16 | 4 and 7 and 12 and 15 |
Inclusion exclusion criteria.
| Inclusion Criteria: | Exclusion Criteria: |
|---|---|
| Articles that do not explicitly state the exclusion of participants that have: | |
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English language |
Neurological disorders such as sensory processing disorders, or intellectual disabilities that impede the participants’ perception of pain. |
|
Ages 0–18 |
A physical disability that impairs the ability to carry out self-reported pain scales i.e., visual impairment. |
|
Peer reviewed articles |
Editorials will not be included |
|
Conference abstracts) are eligible only if we can identify the full-text report. |
Study protocols for future or ongoing evaluations to capture self-reported acute and chronic pain outcome in children and adolescents based interventions. |
Figure 1PRIMA flow chart.
Summary of findings and limitations of emerging pain outcome measures included.
| Name | Study | Methodology and Sample | Findings | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Electronic pain outcome measures | ||||
| Electronic pain diary | Palermo et al., 2004 | Randomized clinical trial. | Children with e-diaries completed more days compared to p-diaries. P-diaries more errors. | Only included pain tracking at the end of the day, not multiple times of the day |
| Computer Face Scale | Fanciullo et al., 2007 | Cohort observational study evaluating feasibility of the computerised version of the Wong Baker Face scale. 54 in-patient children with mean age of 10.7; and a second convenience sample of 30 childrens with mean age of 7.2. Each sample used to test two objectives. | Authors reported that the majority (76%) of participants preferred to use the computer version over paper. Moreover, authors showed that children were able to show varying levels of emotion when expressing pain levels. | Data only collected at one time point and timeframe was not explicit. No control group. Difficult to quantitatively compare with other scales that use 0–10 numerical values. |
| eOuch | Stinson et al., 2008 | Descriptive study design. 13 adolescents with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA). | Participants required to complete eOuch 3 times per day. Most participants reported the ediary was easy to use. Phase 1 of study had 73% compliance and phase 2 had 70%. | Small sample size and sample only from one tertiary pediatric centre. Same patients were used in both usability and acceptability studies. |
| eOuch | Stinson et al., 2008 | A descriptive study design. | Data was collected by the children. Evidence of construct validity and feasibility of eOuch pain diary in adolescents with JIA. Provided more information (3 times a day) compared to Palermo et al. | 22% of data was missing potentially leading to a biased estimate of average weekly electronic pain ratings. |
| personal data assistants (PDA) FPS | Wood et al., 2011 | Observational, multicenter, randomized, cross-over, controlled, open trial. | Data was collected by hospitalised children. Mean levels of pain scores were 3.1 ± 2.3 and 3.2 ± 2.3 for paper and PDA scores, respectively. | Participants from multiple wards—chronic disease and also day surgery. None of the studies had a mean time between the assessments of “less than 30 min” |
| Computer Face Scale | Cravero et al., 2013 | Validation study of the Computer Face Scale. Included 40 children aged 5–13 who underwent a tonsillectomy at Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. Participants used a Dell Mobile PDA to display the face scale and arrows were used to cycle between each expression. | When comparing CFS to the verbal rating scale and wong baker scale, authors concluded good validity scores: “The correlation between the pain ratings from the Computer Face Scale and the Wong-Baker Faces Scale after surgery was 0.83”. | Sample population was limited to those undergoing surgery and therefore we were unable to generalise to other populations. No mention of CFS available for use on mobile phones and/or app stores across multiple devices. |
| eOuch | Stinson et al., 2014 | Construct validity study in children with JIA. Comparing momentary and recalled pain measurements with eOuch. 70 adolescent JIA participants. | Between-person momentary and recalled pain measurements showed a moderate Interclass Correlation Coeficient (ICC). Within-person measurements displayed weak ICC. | Sample sourced from one clinic. Study did not include a practice session. Weekly momentary analysis may have been influenced by 22% missing data reported. |
| SUPER-KIDZ | Luca et al., 2017 | Clinimetric study using prospectively collected repeated measures | For study 1, data was collected by the children Good internal consistency, responsiveness and satisfactory test–retest reliability. | Small sample size |
| BAPQ-C | Jordan et al., 2020 | Fourteen adolescents with chronic pain (13 females; 13–16 years) were recruited from a hospital-based residential pain management programme. Qualitative study focusing on exploring the feasbility of the electronic version of Bath Adolescent Pain Questionnaire. | Authors reported high acceptability of the BAPQ-C. 93% of participants reported that the BAPQ-C was both ‘quicker’ and ‘easier’ to complete than the BAPQ. Only one participant preferred the paper version. | Small and specific sample population. Further validation required in patients outside hospital residential care. |
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| Pain Squad | Stinson et al., 2013 | Usability, feasibility, compliance, and satisfaction study. Qualitative interviews followed by compliance and satisfaction data were obtained. 15 adolescents with cancer with average age of 13. | Participants during interviews provided feedback on the app and authors made adjustments accordingly. “88% of questions were rated as “important” or “very important by the majority (> 50%) of adolescents”. Compliance was high with mean of 81%. Authors also reported high satisfaction among the sample. | No direct examination of high compliance rates. App only accessed with iPhone or other apple devices. Information from interviewed participants was not verified with a follow-up interview. |
| Painometer | Sanchez Rodriguez et al., 2015 | Cross-Sectional Observational Study | Data was collected by the children. 80% confidence interval—determined that they were interchangeable | Asked participants to remember maximum pain over last 3 months. Presentation order of scales was not randomised |
| Pain Squad | Stinson et al., 2015 | A prospective descriptive study design with repeated measures was used to test the construct validity, reliability, and feasibility. | Data was collected by the children Found that the multidimensional app was valid, reliable and feasible within a pediatric cancer setting | Small sample size in study 2—not enough participants recruited |
| Smartphone FPS-R and CAS | Sun et al., 2015 | observational, randomized, cross-over-controlled, open trial. | Data was collected by the children Panda correlated strongly with original scores. Mean pain scores higher in application compared to original tool—systematic bias, within clinical significance (80%) | Not multi dimensionsional—27% of scores were 0 on the FPS-R. Did not assess reliability of application. One sample location. |
| JIApp | Cai et al., 2017 | Design, develop, and evaluate the acceptability and usability of JIApp. 3 phase study on children with JIA. Participants ranged from ages 10–24 across the phased study. Three themes: (1) Remote monitoring; (2) Treatment adherence; (3) Education and Support. | Ability for patients with JIA to report and monitor several parameters associated with their disease including but not limited to pain, joint symptoms, psychological well-being, activity limitation. | Limited sample size. Will require further validation in a larger clinical trial. |
| Pain Squad+ | Jibb et al., 2017 | An cohort prospective design of adolescents ranging from 12–18 who were currently undergoing cancer treatment. 40 participants were recruited with a mean age of 14.2. | Overall adherence of Pain Squad+ was 77.2%. Acceptability e-scaled showed a minimum average of 3 in all items assessed indicating satisfactory acceptability. | Single group design. No control group. Pilot study and therefore requires further investigation on a larger sample size. |
| iCanCope PostOp app | Birnie et al., 2019 | User-centered design study with 2 principle phases. (1) Semi-structured interviews, (2) 2-stage Delphi Survey. 19 children with mean age of 15.26 who underwent surgery within a 7-day period were recruited. | All participants reported the three proposed features of the app as important (pain tracking, pain advice, and goal setting). Multiple features were proposed by participants, parents and health care workers. These include but are not limited to: Pain advice within the app; goal setting; direct communication with health care providers and medication tracking were also proposed. | Convenience sample. Potentially limited by a lack of comprehensiveness of all types of surgeries for potential end users. |
| Interactive Clinics App | Turnbull et al., 2020 | Cross-Sectional Observational Study. 47 children and adolescents (mean age 13.9 years, SD 2.89 years; range 10–18 years). | Authors concluded moderate to good ICC when interchanging the eVAS and pVAS. | Convenience sample. Possibly lower reliability in children/adolescent sample due to differences in scale sizes fo VAS measuring line. |
| PainAPPle® | Martínez García et al., 2020 | Descriptive cohort study of 44 paediatric patients post surgery. Mean age = 11.3. | Data were collected by children after they recovered from their anaesthetic post-surgery. PainAPPle was used at 30 min intervals to measure pain and other post-operative outcomes. Statistically significant correlations were produced when comparing the electronic and paper versions of PainAPPle. | Specific population sample. Not generalisable. Requires further testing for validation. |
| iCanCope app | Lalloo et al., 2021 | Feasibility and pilot RCT for the iCanCope app in adolescents with JIA. 60 adolescents with JIA recruited and randomised to a control or trial intervention. Mean age = 15.0. Trial invervention/condition was the iCanCope app + self management features. The control group only received the iCanCope app (no self-management). | Both study conditions were deployed with high success. Pain intensity improved in both groups by 1.73 (intervention) and 1.09 (control). No significant changes in quality of life or pain-related activity limitations. | Requires a third arm (with just usual care, i.e., no app) to assess the effectiveness of iCanCope on outcomes in children with JIA. |