| Literature DB >> 35234654 |
Nicolas Kerckhove1, Noémie Delage2, Sébastien Cambier2, Nathalie Cantagrel3, Eric Serra4, Fabienne Marcaillou2, Caroline Maindet5, Pascale Picard2, Gaelle Martiné6, Rodrigue Deleens7, Anne-Priscille Trouvin8, Lauriane Fourel9, Gaelle Espagne-Dubreuilh6, Ludovic Douay4, Stéphane Foulon4, Bénédicte Dufraisse6, Christian Gov10, Eric Viel11, François Jedryka11, Sophie Pouplin7, Cécile Lestrade3, Emmanuel Combe3, Serge Perrot8, Dominique Perocheau8, Valentine De Brisson9, Pascale Vergne-Salle6, Patrick Mertens10, Bruno Pereira2, Abdoul Jalil Djiberou Mahamadou12, Violaine Antoine12, Alice Corteval13, Alain Eschalier13, Christian Dualé2, Nadine Attal14, Nicolas Authier2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic pain affects approximately 30% of the general population, severely degrades quality of life (especially in older adults) and professional life (inability or reduction in the ability to work and loss of employment), and leads to billions in additional health care costs. Moreover, available painkillers are old, with limited efficacy and can cause significant adverse effects. Thus, there is a need for innovation in the management of chronic pain. Better characterization of patients could help to identify the predictors of successful treatments, and thus, guide physicians in the initial choice of treatment and in the follow-up of their patients. Nevertheless, current assessments of patients with chronic pain provide only fragmentary data on painful daily experiences. Real-life monitoring of subjective and objective markers of chronic pain using mobile health (mHealth) programs can address this issue.Entities:
Keywords: chronic pain; eHealth; feasibility study; mHealth; self-monitoring
Year: 2022 PMID: 35234654 PMCID: PMC8928045 DOI: 10.2196/30052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Form Res ISSN: 2561-326X
eDOL features.
| Feature | Included in | Assessment point or interval | Details |
| Inclusion form | Investigator web platform | Initial visit | Last name, first name, email, ID number |
| Initial visit | History (clinical, psychiatric, drug), clinical examination, medico-economic aspect (type of medical consultations), diagnosis of pain according to International Classification of Disease, 11th revision | ||
| Personal information | Smartphone app | Initial visit | Sociodemographic (work, alcohol use, tobacco use) |
| Initial visit | Pain characterization: frequency, duration, aggravating and alleviating factors | ||
| Treatment forms | Investigator web platform | Updated at each consultation | Analgesics (name, dates, dosage, side effects); list of nonmedicinal techniques and other treatments (free text) |
| Assessments | Smartphone app | Repeated weekly | 11-point numeric rating scale (0-10): sleep, morale, fatigue and energy, body comfort, anxiety, pain |
| Self-questionnaires | Smartphone app | During the first 2 weeks | 5 sessions of questionnaires |
| Not repeated | Fear-avoidance beliefsa, Injustice Experience Questionnaire, Maslach Burn-out Inventorya, Pain Beliefs and Perceptions Inventory, Evaluation of level of precariousness, Job Content Questionnairea, Life Orientation Test-Revised, Belief in a just world, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklistb, Toronto Alexithymia Scale Big Five Inventory | ||
| Every 3 months | Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnairec, Headache Impact Testc, irritable bowel severity scoring systemc, Prescription Opioid Misuse Indexb, Patients’ Global Impression of Changeb, Neuropathic Pain Scale Inventoryb, Rheumatoid Arthritis Impact of Diseaseb, Brief Pain Inventory, Medical Outcomes Study Sleep Scale | ||
| Every 6 months | Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia, Roland Morris Disability Questionnairec, Western Ontario and McMaster Universitiesc, Pain Catastrophizing Scale, EuroQol 5 dimensions 3 levels, Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale, Satisfaction With Life Scale, Subjective Cognitive Complaints | ||
| Hetero-questionnaires | Investigator web platform | N/Ad | Diagnostic validation: Neuropathic pain 4 + NEUPSIG (neuropathy), Widespread pain index and Symptom severity scale and Fibromyalgia Rapid Screening Tool (fibromyalgia), ROME IV (irritable bowel syndrome) |
| Updated at each consultation | Others: Opioid Risk Tool | ||
| Consultation form | Investigator web platform | Updated at each consultation | clinical examination, medico-eco aspect, observance, benefit-risk ratio of treatments |
aWork-related questionnaires.
bOptional questionnaires.
cDisease-specific questionnaires
dN/A: not applicable.
Figure 1Study flowchart.
Questionnaire completion.
| Assessment | Baseline (n=105), n (%) | 3-month follow-up (n=105), n (%) | 6-month follow-up (n=65), n (%) | ||||
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| Inclusion form (baseline) | 77 (73.3) | N/Aa | N/A | |||
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| Diagnosis form (baseline) | 80 (76.2) | N/A | N/A | |||
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| Treatment form (baseline and follow-up) | 74 (70.5) | N/A | N/A | |||
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| Consultation form (follow-up) | 66 (62.9) | N/A | N/A | |||
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| Weekly assessments | 93 (88.6) | 65 (61.9) | 50 (76.9) | |||
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| Toronto Alexithymia Scale | 100 (95.2) | N/A | N/A | |||
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| Injustice Experience Questionnaire | 100 (95.2) | N/A | N/A | |||
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| Pain Beliefs and Perceptions Inventory | 92 (87.6) | N/A | N/A | |||
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| Life Orientation Test-Revised | 94 (89.5) | N/A | N/A | |||
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| Belief in a just world | 94 (89.5) | N/A | N/A | |||
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| Evaluation of level of precariousness | 93 (88.6) | N/A | N/A | |||
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| Big Five Inventory | 92 (87.6) | N/A | N/A | |||
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| MOS-Sleep Scale | 94 (89.5) | 67 (63.8) | 39 (60.0) | |||
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| Brief Pain Inventory | 93 (88.6) | 67 (63.8) | 38 (58.5) | |||
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| Pain Catastrophizing Scale | 100 (95.2) | N/A | 40 (61.5) | |||
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| Satisfaction With Life Scale | 92 (87.6) | N/A | 35 (53.8) | |||
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| Subjective Cognitive Complaints | 93 (88.6) | N/A | 35 (53.8) | |||
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| EQ-5D-3L | 83 (79.0) | N/A | 36 (55.4) | |||
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| Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale | 94 (89.5) | N/A | 41 (63.1) | |||
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| Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia | 93 (88.6) | N/A | 41 (63.1) | |||
aN/A: not applicable.
Figure 2Completion rate over time.
Physician and patient acceptability of eDOL.
| Acceptability questionnaire | Score (out of 10), mean (SD) | ||
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| The training and support provided was sufficient to use eDOL correctly | 7.3 (1.4) | |
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| After the first training session, it is easy to use eDOL on a daily basis | 6.9 (2.3) | |
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| The technical support (email and phone) was available to assist me if needed | 8.3 (1.2) | |
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| eDOL offers questionnaires and assessments adapted to the multidimensional characterization of my patients | 8.3 (1.2) | |
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| The forms I had to fill in for each patient are adapted and they correspond to the information I usually collect | 6.8 (2.0) | |
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| Thanks to the export function provided in eDOL, I was able to retrieve the completed information for my patients. I was then able to print it (for my patient records) and/or import it into my hospital's electronic management system | 5.0 (2.3) | |
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| The eDOL platform is complete enough to be able to replace my medical records one day | 4.4 (1.9) | |
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| I would like to continue using eDOL in the future | 7.3 (2.0) | |
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| eDOL will be useful in my daily medical practice | 6.8 (1.6) | |
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| eDOL will allow me to better monitor my patients to improve their care | 7.1 (1.6) | |
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| eDOL will be useful for developing clinical research on pain (creation of an e-cohort of patients with chronic pain) | 9.0 (0.9) | |
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| eDOL will be useful for the clinical research projects conducted by my pain clinic | 8.5 (1.7) | |
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| After reading the explanatory document provided by the physician, it was easy for me to use eDOL | 8.4 (2.1) | |
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| After the first use, it is easy to use eDOL on a daily basis | 8.7 (1.9) | |
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| The technical support was responsive enough when I asked for it | 7.0 (2.7) | |
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| eDOL offers questionnaires and assessments that I feel are suitable for monitoring my pain and its impact on my daily life | 7.0 (2.1) | |
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| I believe that the information I have entered in eDOL allows my doctor to better understand my pain and improve its management | 6.9 (2.5) | |
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| During the time that I have been using eDOL, I feel that my doctor has better monitored my symptoms and that my pain has been better managed | 5.7 (3.1) | |
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| I believe that the information I have entered in eDOL will also help researchers to better understand chronic pain and to identify new avenues of research | 7.5 (2.3) | |
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| I think that eDOL will help me in my daily life to better manage my pain and its impact on my daily life | 5.8 (2.7) | |
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| I think that eDOL will gradually improve my quality of life | 5.6 (2.4) | |
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| I would like to continue using eDOL in the future | 7.6 (2.8) | |
a88.5% indicated they would participate in the next phase of study on the new version of eDOL.