The MONARCA Project (MONitoring, treAtment and pRediCtion of bipolAr Disorder Episodes)
NCT ID: NCT01446406
Last Updated: 2016-03-30
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
78 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2011-10-31
2014-08-31
Brief Summary
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If the cell phone self-monitoring system is proved effective in preventing mood symptoms and improving psychosocial functioning,quality of life etc. in the present study there might be basis for extending the use of the system to treatment of patients with bipolar disorder in clinical practice in general.
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Detailed Description
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As part of the clinical assessment in the Mood Disorder clinic, a paper version with daily monitoring of subjective items has been in use for four years. Based on an interactive process with patients suffering from bipolar disorder, the literature as well as clinical experience of the research and clinical group involved in the study we have chosen to monitor the following subjective items: mood, activity, irritability, sleep duration, alcohol consumption, medication intake. Patients are prompted to evaluate these items every evening. In the same way, the following objective items will be collected on all cell phones used in the study: speech duration (minutes speech per 24 hours on the cell phone), social activity (numbers of calls and SMS'es per 24 hours at the cell phone and acceleration of the cell phone).
A personal homepage for each patient is set op on a server so the patient can connect to the homepage with his cell phone using secure codes. By giving informed consent to participate in the MONARCA trial patients allow clinicians to connect to the homepage. It is optionally whether patients allow relatives (or others) to get access to the homepage. Online programs present the monitored subjective items as well as speech duration and number of calls and SMS's graphically.
It is not known whether using a cell phone for electronic monitoring of bipolar disorder the way described above improve outcome compared to using a cell phone to usual communication. A total of 60 patients with bipolar disorder are randomised (1:1) to using the active cell phone program (intervention group) or to using a cell phone to usual communication (control group). All randomised patients will receive a cell phone (Android) for use during the study period.
Stratification is done for age (18-30 versus 30-60 years) and prior hospitalisations (none versus hospitalisation). Study period: 6 months
The assessments are done by the PhD.-student who is not involved in the treatment of the randomised patients and is blinded versus having received the intervention system or the control system. All participants in the study will be examined every month by the PhD student for the entire study period. The following will be done: The bipolar diagnosis is confirmed by a SCAN interview. Further the following ratings/questionnaires are performed every month for 6 months: Hamilton Depression Scale-17 items (HAMD-17), the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS), psychosocial functioning (FAST), Cohen's Perceived stress scale, quality of life (WHOQOL), coping strategies (CISS), Altman Self-rating mania scale, Major Depression Inventory (MDI). Assessment of cognitive function (SCIP and Massachusetts General Hospital Questionnaire), awakening salivary cortisol, urinary oxidative stress, adherence to medication (plasma values of medication) and plasma BDNF are measured at start, half way and end of the study.
All assessment is done single blind, i.e., the assessor (researcher) does not know whether the patient is randomized to the intervention group or the control group.
The outcomes are differences between intervention and control group in:
* Primary: depressive and manic symptoms
* Secondary: psychosocial functioning, quality of life, perceived stress, coping strategies,adherence to medication, cognitive function, awakening salivary cortisol, urinary oxidative stress, plasma BDNF, physical activity, self-rated depressive and manic symptoms
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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MONARCA
MONARCA self-monitoring application on a cell phone to monitor affective symptoms every day.
MONARCA
Monitoring affective symptoms entered by the patient every day.
NON-MONARCA
This is the same mobile phone as the MONARCA mobile phone. Yet the MONARCA application has not been installed. The mobile phone can only be used as a normal mobile phone for communication purposes.
NON-MONARCA
A mobile phone for communication purposes only. No application has been installed.
Interventions
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MONARCA
Monitoring affective symptoms entered by the patient every day.
NON-MONARCA
A mobile phone for communication purposes only. No application has been installed.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Hamilton Depression Scale under or equal to 17
* Young Mania Rating Scale under or equal to 17
Exclusion Criteria
* Other severe mental illness (schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder)
* Lack of technical skills
* Lack of knowledge of Danish
* Pregnancy
* Lack of desire/willingness to use the delivered cell phone as primary phone
18 Years
60 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Copenhagen
OTHER
IT University of Copenhagen
OTHER
The European Union, 7.th Frame program
UNKNOWN
Psychiatric Centre Rigshospitalet
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Maria Faurholt-Jepsen
Principal Investigator, Medical doctor and PhD student
Principal Investigators
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Maria Faurholt-Jepsen, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Department of psychiatry, Copenhagen, Denmark
Locations
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Psychiatric Center Copenhagen, Rigshospitalet
Copenhagen, , Denmark
Countries
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References
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Faurholt-Jepsen M, Frost M, Christensen EM, Bardram JE, Vinberg M, Kessing LV. Validity and characteristics of patient-evaluated adherence to medication via smartphones in patients with bipolar disorder: exploratory reanalyses on pooled data from the MONARCA I and II trials. Evid Based Ment Health. 2020 Feb;23(1):2-7. doi: 10.1136/ebmental-2019-300106.
Faurholt-Jepsen M, Vinberg M, Christensen EM, Frost M, Bardram J, Kessing LV. Daily electronic self-monitoring of subjective and objective symptoms in bipolar disorder--the MONARCA trial protocol (MONitoring, treAtment and pRediCtion of bipolAr disorder episodes): a randomised controlled single-blind trial. BMJ Open. 2013 Jul 24;3(7):e003353. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003353. Print 2013.
Other Identifiers
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H-2-2011-056
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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