UNSTRUCTURED The DystoniaDiary is a bespoke electronic health journal for cervical dystonia (CD). Patients selected up to three of their most troublesome CD symptoms and were prompted every 3 days to rate the control of these symptoms on a scale from 0 (very badly) to 100 (very well). Dates of onset and offset of response to injected botulinum toxin and CDIP-58 questionnaire data could also be added. The objective of this open-label, single-centre, single-arm observational study was to assess the acceptability and utility of the DystoniaDiary in CD patients treated with injected botulinum toxins as part of their usual care. 34 patients installed DystoniaDiary. 25 patients (74%) recorded data for ≥12 weeks and 21 patients (62%) for ≥16 weeks. Median time between first and last data input was 140 days with a median of 13 recordings/patient. User experience questionnaires at Weeks 4 and 12 (20 respondents) indicated that the majority of respondents found the Dystonia Diary app easy to install and use, liked using it and would recommend it to others (19/20) and wished to continue using it (16/20). A smaller proportion indicated that the DystoniaDiary gave a greater sense of control in managing their CD (13/20). Response to treatment was apparent in the symptom control scores of some patients whereas the severity of other patients’ symptoms did not appear to change despite injected treatment. In conclusion, the DystoniaDiary application was useful and acceptable for a large proportion of this sample of CD patients attending a botulinum toxin injection clinic. Patients appear to be willing to regularly record symptom severity for at least the duration of a botulinum injection treatment cycle (12-16 weeks). This application may be useful in monitoring and optimising individual patient responses to botulinum toxin injection.
Background The mainstay of treatment for cervical dystonia (CD) is regular botulinum toxin injections every 3-4 months. Clinical evaluation of response is dependent on the patient’s recall of how well symptoms responded to the previous injection. A mobile health app could assist both patients and health care professionals to monitor treatment benefits and side effects to assist with the selection of muscle and toxin dose to be injected at the next visit. The DystoniaDiary is a bespoke electronic health journal for monitoring symptoms of CD and response to treatment. Objective The objective of this study was to assess the acceptability and utility of the DystoniaDiary in patients with CD treated with botulinum toxins as part of their usual care. Methods In this open-label, single-center, single-arm observational study, patients attending a botulinum toxin injection clinic were invited to download the DystoniaDiary app. Patients selected up to 3 of their most troublesome CD symptoms (from a predefined list) and were prompted every 3 days to rate the control of these symptoms on a scale from 0 (very badly) to 100 (very well). Dates of onset and wearing off of response to injected botulinum toxin and responses to the Cervical Dystonia Impact Profile (CDIP-58) questionnaire at baseline and week 6 were also recorded in the app. Results A total of 34 patients installed DystoniaDiary. Twenty-five patients (25/34, 74%) recorded data for ≥12 weeks and 21 patients (21/34, 62%) for ≥16 weeks. Median time between the first and last data input was 140 days with a median of 13 recordings per patient. User experience questionnaires at weeks 4 and 12 (20 respondents) indicated that the majority of respondents found the DystoniaDiary app easy to install and use, liked using it, would recommend it to others (19/20), and wished to continue using it (16/20). A smaller proportion indicated that the DystoniaDiary gave a greater sense of control in managing their CD (13/20). There was interindividual variation in patients’ perceptions of control of their symptoms after botulinum toxin injection. Response to treatment was apparent in the symptom control scores for some patients, whereas the severity of other patients’ symptoms did not appear to change after treatment. Conclusions This observational study demonstrated that the DystoniaDiary app was perceived as useful and acceptable for a large proportion of this sample of patients with CD attending a botulinum toxin clinic. Patients with CD appear to be willing to regularly record symptom severity for at least the duration of a botulinum injection treatment cycle (12-16 weeks). This app may be useful in monitoring and optimizing individual patient responses to botulinum toxin injection.
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