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Mapping Relevance of Digital Measures to Meaningful Symptoms and Impacts in Early Parkinson’s Disease

BACKGROUND: Adoption of new digital measures for clinical trials and practice has been hindered by lack of actionable qualitative data demonstrating relevance of these metrics to people with Parkinson’s disease. OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated of relevance of WATCH-PD digital measures to monitoring...

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Autores principales: Mammen, Jennifer R., Speck, Rebecca M., Stebbins, Glenn M., Müller, Martijn L.T.M., Yang, Phillip T., Campbell, Michelle, Cosman, Josh, Crawford, John E., Dam, Tien, Hellsten, Johan, Jensen-Roberts, Stella, Kostrzebski, Melissa, Simuni, Tanya, Barowicz, Kimberly Ward, Cedarbaum, Jesse M., Dorsey, E. Ray, Stephenson, Diane, Adams, Jamie L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: IOS Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10357170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37212073
http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/JPD-225122
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author Mammen, Jennifer R.
Speck, Rebecca M.
Stebbins, Glenn M.
Müller, Martijn L.T.M.
Yang, Phillip T.
Campbell, Michelle
Cosman, Josh
Crawford, John E.
Dam, Tien
Hellsten, Johan
Jensen-Roberts, Stella
Kostrzebski, Melissa
Simuni, Tanya
Barowicz, Kimberly Ward
Cedarbaum, Jesse M.
Dorsey, E. Ray
Stephenson, Diane
Adams, Jamie L.
author_facet Mammen, Jennifer R.
Speck, Rebecca M.
Stebbins, Glenn M.
Müller, Martijn L.T.M.
Yang, Phillip T.
Campbell, Michelle
Cosman, Josh
Crawford, John E.
Dam, Tien
Hellsten, Johan
Jensen-Roberts, Stella
Kostrzebski, Melissa
Simuni, Tanya
Barowicz, Kimberly Ward
Cedarbaum, Jesse M.
Dorsey, E. Ray
Stephenson, Diane
Adams, Jamie L.
author_sort Mammen, Jennifer R.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Adoption of new digital measures for clinical trials and practice has been hindered by lack of actionable qualitative data demonstrating relevance of these metrics to people with Parkinson’s disease. OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated of relevance of WATCH-PD digital measures to monitoring meaningful symptoms and impacts of early Parkinson’s disease from the patient perspective. METHODS: Participants with early Parkinson’s disease (N = 40) completed surveys and 1:1 online-interviews. Interviews combined: 1) symptom mapping to delineate meaningful symptoms/impacts of disease, 2) cognitive interviewing to assess content validity of digital measures, and 3) mapping of digital measures back to personal symptoms to assess relevance from the patient perspective. Content analysis and descriptive techniques were used to analyze data. RESULTS: Participants perceived mapping as deeply engaging, with 39/40 reporting improved ability to communicate important symptoms and relevance of measures. Most measures (9/10) were rated relevant by both cognitive interviewing (70–92.5%) and mapping (80–100%). Two measures related to actively bothersome symptoms for more than 80% of participants (Tremor, Shape rotation). Tasks were generally deemed relevant if they met three participant context criteria: 1) understanding what the task measured, 2) believing it targeted an important symptom of PD (past, present, or future), and 3) believing the task was a good test of that important symptom. Participants did not require that a task relate to active symptoms or “real” life to be relevant. CONCLUSION: Digital measures of tremor and hand dexterity were rated most relevant in early PD. Use of mapping enabled precise quantification of qualitative data for more rigorous evaluation of new measures.
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spelling pubmed-103571702023-07-21 Mapping Relevance of Digital Measures to Meaningful Symptoms and Impacts in Early Parkinson’s Disease Mammen, Jennifer R. Speck, Rebecca M. Stebbins, Glenn M. Müller, Martijn L.T.M. Yang, Phillip T. Campbell, Michelle Cosman, Josh Crawford, John E. Dam, Tien Hellsten, Johan Jensen-Roberts, Stella Kostrzebski, Melissa Simuni, Tanya Barowicz, Kimberly Ward Cedarbaum, Jesse M. Dorsey, E. Ray Stephenson, Diane Adams, Jamie L. J Parkinsons Dis Research Report BACKGROUND: Adoption of new digital measures for clinical trials and practice has been hindered by lack of actionable qualitative data demonstrating relevance of these metrics to people with Parkinson’s disease. OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated of relevance of WATCH-PD digital measures to monitoring meaningful symptoms and impacts of early Parkinson’s disease from the patient perspective. METHODS: Participants with early Parkinson’s disease (N = 40) completed surveys and 1:1 online-interviews. Interviews combined: 1) symptom mapping to delineate meaningful symptoms/impacts of disease, 2) cognitive interviewing to assess content validity of digital measures, and 3) mapping of digital measures back to personal symptoms to assess relevance from the patient perspective. Content analysis and descriptive techniques were used to analyze data. RESULTS: Participants perceived mapping as deeply engaging, with 39/40 reporting improved ability to communicate important symptoms and relevance of measures. Most measures (9/10) were rated relevant by both cognitive interviewing (70–92.5%) and mapping (80–100%). Two measures related to actively bothersome symptoms for more than 80% of participants (Tremor, Shape rotation). Tasks were generally deemed relevant if they met three participant context criteria: 1) understanding what the task measured, 2) believing it targeted an important symptom of PD (past, present, or future), and 3) believing the task was a good test of that important symptom. Participants did not require that a task relate to active symptoms or “real” life to be relevant. CONCLUSION: Digital measures of tremor and hand dexterity were rated most relevant in early PD. Use of mapping enabled precise quantification of qualitative data for more rigorous evaluation of new measures. IOS Press 2023-06-13 /pmc/articles/PMC10357170/ /pubmed/37212073 http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/JPD-225122 Text en © 2023 – The authors. Published by IOS Press https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Report
Mammen, Jennifer R.
Speck, Rebecca M.
Stebbins, Glenn M.
Müller, Martijn L.T.M.
Yang, Phillip T.
Campbell, Michelle
Cosman, Josh
Crawford, John E.
Dam, Tien
Hellsten, Johan
Jensen-Roberts, Stella
Kostrzebski, Melissa
Simuni, Tanya
Barowicz, Kimberly Ward
Cedarbaum, Jesse M.
Dorsey, E. Ray
Stephenson, Diane
Adams, Jamie L.
Mapping Relevance of Digital Measures to Meaningful Symptoms and Impacts in Early Parkinson’s Disease
title Mapping Relevance of Digital Measures to Meaningful Symptoms and Impacts in Early Parkinson’s Disease
title_full Mapping Relevance of Digital Measures to Meaningful Symptoms and Impacts in Early Parkinson’s Disease
title_fullStr Mapping Relevance of Digital Measures to Meaningful Symptoms and Impacts in Early Parkinson’s Disease
title_full_unstemmed Mapping Relevance of Digital Measures to Meaningful Symptoms and Impacts in Early Parkinson’s Disease
title_short Mapping Relevance of Digital Measures to Meaningful Symptoms and Impacts in Early Parkinson’s Disease
title_sort mapping relevance of digital measures to meaningful symptoms and impacts in early parkinson’s disease
topic Research Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10357170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37212073
http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/JPD-225122
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