E-Health technologies for treatment of depression, anxiety and emotional distress in person with diabetes mellitus: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Diabetes Res Clin Pract. 2023 Sep:203:110854. doi: 10.1016/j.diabres.2023.110854. Epub 2023 Jul 26.

Abstract

Objective: This systematic review of randomized clinical trials (RCT) summarized the available evidence regarding the use of e-Health technologies for the treatment of depression, anxiety, and emotional distress in person with diabetes mellitus.

Methods: The Cochrane CENTRAL, MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science and LILACS databases searched were up to January 11th, 2023. The primary outcomes were improvement of depression, anxiety, diabetes-related emotional distress and quality of life. Reviewers, in pairs and independently, selected the studies and extracted their data.

Results: A total of 10 RCT involving 2,209 participants were analyzed. The methodological quality of the studies reviewed was high. Results showed improvements in depression with the use of Internet-Guided Self-Help (SMD = -0.74, 95%CI = -1.04 to -0.43) or Telephone-Delivered Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) (SMD = -0.42, 95%CI = -0.65 to -0.19); in anxiety with Internet-Guided Self-Help (SMD = -0.72, 95%CI = -1.02 to -0.42) or Diabetes-specific-CBT (SMD = -0.60, 95%CI = -1.18 to -0.02); and in emotional distress with Internet-Guided Self-Help (SMD = -0.72, 95%CI = -1.02 to -0.41) or Healthy Outcomes through Patient Empowerment (SMD = -0.26, 95%CI = -0.53 to 0.01) compared to usual care.

Conclusion: Due to heterogeneity in interventions, populations, follow-up time and outcomes, future RCT should be conducted to confirm these findings.

Keywords: Anxiety; Depression; Diabetes distress; E-Health; Type 1 diabetes mellitus; Type 2 diabetes mellitus.