Heterogeneity of information across seven curated national or international digital health app repositories
Viet-Thi Tran, Philippe Ravaud, Marleen Kunneman, Victor M. Montori, Ngan Thi Thuy PhiObjective
Digital health applications (health apps) are increasingly integrated in clinical care. Yet the information describing these apps varies across curated app repositories supporting prescription. We aimed to identify the information items used to describe health apps in repositories; and to quantify the completeness of publicly displayed app-entry information across repositories.
Methods
We conducted a cross-sectional study of seven national or international curated health app repositories: mHealthBelgium, DiGA, AppThera, ORCHA, GGD AppStore, MIND, and AppGuide. In January 2025, we randomly selected 140 health apps, with 20 apps per repository. For each app, one reviewer extracted the publicly available information displayed in the repository entry and inductively identified the information items reported (i.e., atomic information elements used to describe apps). These information items were then grouped into categories by an expert committee. We calculated, for each repository, the median number of items reported across apps, overall and by category.
Results
Health apps were described by 32 information items grouped into 10 categories: general information, regulatory information, compatibility, costs, indication, functions, evidence, user experience, data governance and security, and change history. The median number of items reported in repositories ranged from a median of 9/32 items, IQR 9 to 11 in MIND to 27/32, IQR 26 to 28 in DiGA. Only, three repositories (AppThera, DiGA and AppGuide) systematically reported information on the evidence supporting the apps for all listed apps.
Conclusions
Curated health app repositories differed in the information items presented to clinicians and patients. Incomplete reporting of clinically relevant information, particularly evidence and data governance, may limit informed app selection and prescription. Minimum reporting standards are needed to enable safe prescription and reliable integration of health apps into clinical practice.