# Characterizing Patient-Reported Fatigue Using Electronic Diaries in Neurodegenerative and Immune-Mediated Inflammatory Diseases: Observational Study

**Authors:** Adrien Bennetot, Rana Zia Ur Rehman, Robbin Romijnders, Zhi Li, Victoria Macrae, Kristen Davies, Wan-Fai Ng, Walter Maetzler, Jennifer Kudelka, Hanna Hildesheim, Kirsten Emmert, Emma Paulides, C Janneke van der Woude, Ralf Reilmann, Svenja Aufenberg, Meenakshi Chatterjee, Nikolay V Manyakov, Clémence Pinaud, Stefan Avey

PMC · DOI: 10.2196/65879 · JMIR Formative Research · 2025-05-05

## TL;DR

This study shows that electronic diaries can effectively track daily fatigue changes in patients with chronic diseases, offering insights beyond traditional weekly surveys.

## Contribution

The study introduces high-frequency electronic diaries as a feasible tool to capture intraday fatigue variability in chronic conditions.

## Key findings

- Adherence to eDiary use varied by disease cohort, with IMID participants showing higher adherence than NDD participants.
- Fatigue levels were significantly higher in the evening compared to the morning, indicating diurnal variation.
- eDiary scores moderately correlated with FACIT-F scores, suggesting complementary insights to traditional PROs.

## Abstract

Fatigue is a prevalent and debilitating symptom in many chronic conditions, including immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs) and neurodegenerative diseases (NDDs). Fatigue often fluctuates significantly within and between days, yet traditional patient-reported outcomes (PROs) typically rely on recall periods of a week or more, potentially missing these short-term variations. The development of digital tools, such as electronic diaries (eDiaries), offers a unique opportunity to collect granular, real-time data. However, the feasibility, adherence, and comparability of eDiary-based assessments to established PROs require further investigation.

This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of using a high-frequency eDiary to capture intraday variability in fatigue and to compare eDiary data with scores obtained from the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue (FACIT-F), a validated weekly recall PRO.

Data were collected from 159 participants enrolled in the IDEA-FAST (Identifying Digital Endpoints to Assess Fatigue, Sleep and Activities in Daily Living in Neurodegenerative Disorders and Immune-Mediated Inflammatory Diseases) feasibility study; a 4-week prospective observational study conducted at 4 European centers. Participants included individuals with NDDs (n=39), IMIDs (n=78), and healthy volunteers (n=42). Participants used an eDiary to report their physical and mental fatigue levels up to 4 times daily on a 7-point Likert scale (0=low and 6=high). Adherence was calculated as the proportion of completed eDiary entries relative to the total expected entries. Correlations between averaged eDiary scores and weekly FACIT-F scores were analyzed.

Adherence to the eDiary protocol was 5505/8880 (61.99%) overall, varying by cohort, with the highest adherence (1117/1200, 93.07%) observed in the primary Sjögren syndrome cohort and the lowest adherence in the Parkinson disease (410/960, 42.7%) and Huntington disease (320/720, 44.4%) cohorts. The average adherence was 430/1680 (43.45%) in the NDD cohorts and 3367/4560 (73.84%) in the IMID cohorts. Fatigue levels showed clear diurnal variation, with significantly higher fatigue reported in the evening compared to the morning (P<.001). A moderate correlation (Spearman=0.46, P<.001) was observed between eDiary fatigue scores and FACIT-F scores, with stronger cohort-specific associations for certain FACIT-F items. These results indicate that eDiaries provide complementary insights to weekly PROs by capturing intraday fluctuations in fatigue.

This study demonstrates the feasibility, acceptability, and validity of using high-frequency eDiaries to assess fatigue in chronic conditions. By effectively detecting intra- and interday fatigue variations, eDiaries complement traditional PROs such as FACIT-F, offering a more nuanced understanding of fatigue patterns. Future research should explore optimized eDiary protocols to balance participant burden with data granularity.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Parkinson disease (MONDO:0005180), Huntington disease (MONDO:0007739)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** IMIDs (MESH:C567355), Parkinson disease (MESH:D010300), Illness (MESH:D002908), Huntington disease (MESH:D006816), Fatigue (MESH:D005221), Sjogren syndrome (MESH:D012859), NDDs (MESH:D019636)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12068833/full.md

## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12068833/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12068833