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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Characterizing Breakthrough Cancer Pain Using Ecological Momentary Assessment with a Smartphone App: Feasibility and Clinical Findings.
Carlos Suso-riberaCarlos FerrerAzucena García-palaciosDiana CastillaVerónica Martínez-borbaIrene ZaragozáFrancisco Villegassubject
MaleCoping (psychology)Health Toxicology and MutagenesisEcological Momentary AssessmentPsychological interventionArticle03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRecall biasNeoplasmsmental disordersMedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineAdverse effectsmartphone applicationRetrospective Studiesbreakthrough cancer pain; ecological momentary assessment; smartphone application; pain management; pain characterizationbusiness.industryEcologyPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthRRetrospective cohort studyCancer Painpain characterizationMiddle AgedMental healthMobile Applicationsbreakthrough cancer painMoodpain management030220 oncology & carcinogenesisMedicineFeasibility StudiesFemaleSmartphoneCancer painbusinessdescription
Background: mobile applications (apps) facilitate cancer pain ecological momentary assessment (EMA) and provide more reliable data than retrospective monitoring. The aims of this study are (a) to describe the status of persons with cancer pain when assessed ecologically, (b) to analyze the utility of clinical alarms integrated into the app, and (c) to test the feasibility of implementing an app for daily oncological pain monitoring. Methods: in this feasibility study, 21 patients (mean age = 56.95 years, SD = 10.53, 81.0% men) responded to an app-based evaluation of physical status (baseline and breakthrough cancer pain (BTcP)) and mental health variables (fatigue, mood, and coping) daily during 30 days. Results: cancer pain characterization with the app was similar to data from the literature using retrospective assessments in terms of BTcP duration and perceived medication effectiveness. However, BTcP was less frequent when evaluated ecologically. Pain, fatigue, and mood were comparable in the morning and evening. Passive coping strategies were the most employed daily. Clinical alarms appear to be useful to detect and address adverse events. App implementation was feasible and acceptable. Conclusion: apps reduce recall bias and facilitate a rapid response to adverse events in oncological care. Future efforts should be addressed to integrate EMA and ecological momentary interventions to facilitate pain self-management via apps.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-06-01 | International journal of environmental research and public health |