Personalized digital intervention for depression based on social rhythm principles adds significantly to outpatient treatment

Frank, Ellen and Wallace, Meredith L. and Matthews, Mark L. and Kendrick, Jeremy and Leach, Jeremy and Moore, Tara and Aranovich, Gabriel and Choudhury, Tanzeem and Shah, Nirav R. and Framroze, Zeenia and Posey, Greg and Burgess, Samuel and Kupfer, David J. (2022) Personalized digital intervention for depression based on social rhythm principles adds significantly to outpatient treatment. Frontiers in Digital Health, 4. ISSN 2673-253X

[thumbnail of pubmed-zip/versions/1/package-entries/fdgth-04-870522.pdf] Text
pubmed-zip/versions/1/package-entries/fdgth-04-870522.pdf

Download (2MB)

Abstract

We conducted a 16-week randomized controlled trial in psychiatric outpatients with a lifetime diagnosis of a mood and/or anxiety disorder to measure the impact of a first-of-its-kind precision digital intervention software solution based on social rhythm regulation principles. The full intent-to-treat (ITT) sample consisted of 133 individuals, aged 18–65. An exploratory sub-sample of interest was those individuals who presented with moderately severe to severe depression at study entry (baseline PHQ-8 score ≥15; N = 28). Cue is a novel digital intervention platform that capitalizes on the smartphone's ability to continuously monitor depression-relevant behavior patterns and use each patient's behavioral data to provide timely, personalized “micro-interventions,” making this the first example of a precision digital intervention of which we are aware. Participants were randomly allocated to receive Cue plus care-as-usual or digital monitoring only plus care as usual. Within the full study and depressed-at-entry samples, we fit a mixed effects model to test for group differences in the slope of depressive symptoms over 16 weeks. To account for the non-linear trajectory with more flexibility, we also fit a mixed effects model considering week as a categorical variable and used the resulting estimates to test the group difference in PHQ change from baseline to 16 weeks. In the full sample, the group difference in the slope of PHQ-8 was negligible (Cohen's d = −0.10); however, the Cue group demonstrated significantly greater improvement from baseline to 16 weeks (p = 0.040). In the depressed-at-entry sample, we found evidence for benefit of Cue. The group difference in the slope of PHQ-8 (Cohen's d = −0.72) indicated a meaningfully more rapid rate of improvement in the intervention group than in the control group. The Cue group also demonstrated significantly greater improvement in PHQ-8 from baseline to 16 weeks (p = 0.009). We are encouraged by the size of the intervention effect in those who were acutely ill at baseline, and by the finding that across all participants, 80% of whom were receiving pharmacotherapy, we observed significant benefit of Cue at 16 weeks of treatment. These findings suggest that a social rhythm-focused digital intervention platform may represent a useful and accessible adjunct to antidepressant treatment (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03152864?term=ellen+frank&draw=2&rank=3).

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Universal Eprints > Multidisciplinary
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 19 Dec 2022 12:25
Last Modified: 22 Mar 2024 04:04
URI: http://journal.article2publish.com/id/eprint/1071

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item