Evaluation of a digital reporting and supporting tool in breast cancer prevention trials (KarmApp)
José Tapia, Marike Gabrielson, Mattias Hammarström, Yvonne Wengström, Jenny Bergqvist, Aki Tuuliainen, Mikael Eriksson, Kamila Czene, Per Hall, Magnus Bäcklund

TL;DR
A smartphone app called KarmApp was developed to help breast cancer prevention trial participants report side effects, and it was used by most participants, especially younger ones.
Contribution
The study evaluates the use of a smartphone app (KarmApp) to improve adverse event reporting in breast cancer prevention trials.
Findings
The KarmApp was used by 93% of participants, with 9.6 interactions per person on average.
Younger participants were more likely to use the app, though 75% of those aged 60–74 also used it.
App usage increased over time, and it was the primary method for reporting adverse events.
Abstract
Anti-estrogens are widely used to reduce recurrence in breast cancer patients. The side effects often lead to treatment non-adherence and the use of anti-hormonal treatments as primary prevention in women with increased risk of breast cancer is very low. We have conducted breast cancer prevention trials aiming to lower the adverse effects of anti-hormones, but with retained effect. For increased two-way communication and to facilitate effective reporting of adverse events we have developed a smartphone application (app), the KarmApp. The aim of our study was to explore the user frequencies of the different features of the app, and if the use is influenced by age and has changed over time. Healthy women aged 40–74, attending the Swedish mammography screening program, were invited to participate in trials evaluating risk-reducing medications at different doses and formulations (KARISMA…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMobile Health and mHealth Applications · Health Literacy and Information Accessibility · Social Media in Health Education
