Currently submitted to: Journal of Medical Internet Research
Date Submitted: Feb 18, 2026
Open Peer Review Period: Feb 19, 2026 - Apr 16, 2026
(currently open for review)
Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.
Association Between Behavioral Phenotypes and Paid mHealth App Subscription and Renewal: A 6-month Latent Class Analysis Study
ABSTRACT
Background:
Mobile health (mHealth) app effectiveness may be limited by low engagement. Increasing understanding of factors influencing engagement may help. Paid mHealth app subscription and renewal are two metrics of particular interest to commercial app developers.
Objective:
Objective:
To identify homogenous user subgroups (ie, behavioral phenotypes) within a paid mHealth app context and examine associations with app subscription and renewal.
Methods:
Methods:
In this 6-month prospective cohort study, latent class analysis (LCA) was conducted with users of a paid mHealth app. Users completing a 7-day free trial between November 2023 and January 2024 were included. LCA produced phenotypes using survey responses (eg, chronic disease status), device-assessed health data (eg, daily step count), and 7-day free trial period engagement data (eg, number app opens). Odds ratios (ORs; P < .05) assessed associations between phenotypes and subscription/renewal.
Results:
Results:
The sample included 934 users (mean age, 41.53 [SD, 9.65] years). Based on LCA fit indices five distinct phenotypes were formed: (1) Highly engaged subscribers, (2) Subscribers with multimorbidity, (3) Healthy subscribers, (4) Non-subscribers with multimorbidity, and (5) Healthy non-subscribers. Phenotypes 1–3 had greater odds of subscribing (OR = 21.31 [8.56, 53.06]; OR = 7.11 [4.04, 12.50]; OR = 8.28 [4.26, 16.08], respectively) than phenotype 4 (OR = 0.82 [0.48, 1.41]), compared to phenotype 5, the reference scenario. Additionally, renewal odds for phenotypes 1–4 were 1.06 [0.62, 1.81], 0.90 [0.54, 1.49], 0.99 [0.58, 1.69], and 0.93 [0.48, 1.80], respectively (vs. reference).
Conclusions:
Conclusions:
Behavioral phenotypes associated with subscription likelihood were identified using data collected during the 7-day trial period. These phenotypes may be strategically targeted with future intervention to boost early engagement and long-term behavior change potential.
Citation
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