Abstract

BackgroundVarious paper-based mood charting instruments are used in the monitoring of symptoms in bipolar disorder. During recent years an increasing number of electronic self-monitoring tools have been developed. The objectives of this systematic review were 1) to evaluate the validity of electronic self-monitoring tools as a method of evaluating mood compared to clinical rating scales for depression and mania and 2) to investigate the effect of electronic self-monitoring tools on clinically relevant outcomes in bipolar disorder.MethodsA systematic review of the scientific literature, reported according to the Preferred Reporting items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) guidelines was conducted. MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO and The Cochrane Library were searched and supplemented by hand search of reference lists. Databases were searched for 1) studies on electronic self-monitoring tools in patients with bipolar disorder reporting on validity of electronically self-reported mood ratings compared to clinical rating scales for depression and mania and 2) randomized controlled trials (RCT) evaluating electronic mood self-monitoring tools in patients with bipolar disorder.ResultsA total of 13 published articles were included. Seven articles were RCTs and six were longitudinal studies. Electronic self-monitoring of mood was considered valid compared to clinical rating scales for depression in six out of six studies, and in two out of seven studies compared to clinical rating scales for mania.The included RCTs primarily investigated the effect of heterogeneous electronically delivered interventions; none of the RCTs investigated the sole effect of electronic mood self-monitoring tools. Methodological issues with risk of bias at different levels limited the evidence in the majority of studies.ConclusionsElectronic self-monitoring of mood in depression appears to be a valid measure of mood in contrast to self-monitoring of mood in mania. There are yet few studies on the effect of electronic self-monitoring of mood in bipolar disorder. The evidence of electronic self-monitoring is limited by methodological issues and by a lack of RCTs. Although the idea of electronic self-monitoring of mood seems appealing, studies using rigorous methodology investigating the beneficial as well as possible harmful effects of electronic self-monitoring are needed.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12888-016-0713-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Various paper-based mood charting instruments are used in the monitoring of symptoms in bipolar disorder

  • These mood charting instruments have been paper-based, such as the National Institute of Mental Health LifeChart Method (NIMH-LCM) [6], the Systematic Treatment Enhancement Program for Bipolar Disorder (STEP-BP) the Mood Chart and the ChronoSheet [7] and have been shown valid compared to clinical rating scales for depression and mania [8, 9]

  • Study selection Eligibility criteria Original studies involving IT platforms for electronic self-monitoring of mood used by adult patients with bipolar disorder ≥18 years of age and either reporting on correlations between electronically self-monitored mood and validated clinical rating scales for depression and mania or RCTs assessing the effect of electronic selfmonitoring tools as an intervention were eligible for review

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Summary

Introduction

Various paper-based mood charting instruments are used in the monitoring of symptoms in bipolar disorder. Many patients with bipolar disorder remain symptomatic during interepisode periods and experience significant subsyndromal day-to-day or week-to-week mood swings that are of greater severity than those experienced by healthy individuals and appear to reflect illness activity [2]. Selfreports are ubiquitous in psychiatric research, and various mood charting instruments for self-monitoring are frequently used in the management and monitoring of depressive and manic symptoms in patients with bipolar disorder These mood charting instruments have been paper-based, such as the National Institute of Mental Health LifeChart Method (NIMH-LCM) [6], the Systematic Treatment Enhancement Program for Bipolar Disorder (STEP-BP) the Mood Chart (mood chart no longer available online) and the ChronoSheet [7] and have been shown valid compared to clinical rating scales for depression and mania [8, 9]. The electronic approach for selfmonitoring of mood offers ecological momentary assessments [15], a monitoring technique for assessment in real-time and in naturalistic settings, offers the ability to verify the timing and compliance of data collection, eliminates the need for costly and errorprone data entry, may help remind patients to perform the self-monitoring and may have higher usability than paper-based versions

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