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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Rehabilitation and Assistive Technologies

Date Submitted: Sep 25, 2017
Open Peer Review Period: Sep 25, 2017 - Oct 10, 2017
Date Accepted: Oct 29, 2017
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Treatment of Low Back Pain with a Digital Multidisciplinary Pain Treatment App: Short-Term Results

Huber S, Priebe JA, Baumann KM, Plidschun A, Schiessl C, Tölle TR

Treatment of Low Back Pain with a Digital Multidisciplinary Pain Treatment App: Short-Term Results

JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol 2017;4(2):e11

DOI: 10.2196/rehab.9032

PMID: 29203460

PMCID: 5735251

Treatment of Low Back Pain with a Digital Multidisciplinary Pain Treatment App: Short-Term Results

  • Stephan Huber; 
  • Janosch A Priebe; 
  • Kaja-Maria Baumann; 
  • Anne Plidschun; 
  • Christine Schiessl; 
  • Thomas R Tölle

ABSTRACT

Background:

Even though modern concepts of disease management of unspecific low back pain (LBP) postulate active participation of patients, this strategy is difficult to adapt unless multidisciplinary pain therapy is applied. Recently, mobile health solutions have proven to be effective aides to foster self-management of many diseases.

Objective:

The objective of this paper was to report on the retrospective short-term results of a digital multidisciplinary pain app for the treatment of LBP.

Methods:

Kaia is a mobile app that digitalizes multidisciplinary pain treatment and is in the market as a medical product class I. For the current study, the data of anonymized Kaia users was retrospectively analyzed. User data were evaluated for 12 weeks regarding duration of use and effect on in-app user reported pain levels, using the numerical rating scale (NRS), depending on whether LBP was classified as acute, subacute, or chronic back pain according to current guidelines.

Results:

Data of 180 users were available. The mean age of the users was 33.9 years (SD 10.9). Pain levels decreased from baseline NRS 4.8 to 3.75 for all users at the end of the observation period. Users who completed 4, 8, or 12 weeks showed an even more pronounced decrease in pain level NRS (baseline 4.9 [SD 1.7] versus 3.6 [SD 1.5] at 4 weeks; baseline 4.7 [SD 1.8] versus 3.2 [SD [2.0] at 8 weeks; baseline 4.6 [SD 2.2] versus 2.6 [SD 2.0] at 12 weeks). In addition, subgroup analysis of acute, subacute, or chronic classification revealed no significant main effect of group (P>.30) on the reduction of pain.

Conclusions:

This retrospective study showed that in a pre-selected population of app users, an app digitalizing multidisciplinary rehabilitation for the self-management of LBP reduced user-reported pain levels significantly. The observed effect size was clinically relevant. Ongoing prospective randomized controlled trials (RCTs) will adjust for potential bias and selection effects.

Conclusions:

This retrospective study showed that in a pre-selected population of app users, an app digitalizing multidisciplinary rehabilitation for the self-management of LBP reduced user-reported pain levels significantly. The observed effect size was clinically relevant. Ongoing prospective RCTs will adjust for potential bias and selection effects.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Huber S, Priebe JA, Baumann KM, Plidschun A, Schiessl C, Tölle TR

Treatment of Low Back Pain with a Digital Multidisciplinary Pain Treatment App: Short-Term Results

JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol 2017;4(2):e11

DOI: 10.2196/rehab.9032

PMID: 29203460

PMCID: 5735251

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.

© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.

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