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Evaluation of smartphone‐based testing to generate exploratory outcome measures in a phase 1 Parkinson's disease clinical trial

Background: Ubiquitous digital technologies such as smartphone sensors promise to fundamentally change biomedical research and treatment monitoring in neurological diseases such as PD, creating a new domain of digital biomarkers. Objectives: The present study assessed the feasibility, reliability, a...

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Autores principales: Lipsmeier, Florian, Taylor, Kirsten I., Kilchenmann, Timothy, Wolf, Detlef, Scotland, Alf, Schjodt‐Eriksen, Jens, Cheng, Wei‐Yi, Fernandez‐Garcia, Ignacio, Siebourg‐Polster, Juliane, Jin, Liping, Soto, Jay, Verselis, Lynne, Boess, Frank, Koller, Martin, Grundman, Michael, Monsch, Andreas U., Postuma, Ronald B., Ghosh, Anirvan, Kremer, Thomas, Czech, Christian, Gossens, Christian, Lindemann, Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6175318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29701258
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mds.27376
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author Lipsmeier, Florian
Taylor, Kirsten I.
Kilchenmann, Timothy
Wolf, Detlef
Scotland, Alf
Schjodt‐Eriksen, Jens
Cheng, Wei‐Yi
Fernandez‐Garcia, Ignacio
Siebourg‐Polster, Juliane
Jin, Liping
Soto, Jay
Verselis, Lynne
Boess, Frank
Koller, Martin
Grundman, Michael
Monsch, Andreas U.
Postuma, Ronald B.
Ghosh, Anirvan
Kremer, Thomas
Czech, Christian
Gossens, Christian
Lindemann, Michael
author_facet Lipsmeier, Florian
Taylor, Kirsten I.
Kilchenmann, Timothy
Wolf, Detlef
Scotland, Alf
Schjodt‐Eriksen, Jens
Cheng, Wei‐Yi
Fernandez‐Garcia, Ignacio
Siebourg‐Polster, Juliane
Jin, Liping
Soto, Jay
Verselis, Lynne
Boess, Frank
Koller, Martin
Grundman, Michael
Monsch, Andreas U.
Postuma, Ronald B.
Ghosh, Anirvan
Kremer, Thomas
Czech, Christian
Gossens, Christian
Lindemann, Michael
author_sort Lipsmeier, Florian
collection PubMed
description Background: Ubiquitous digital technologies such as smartphone sensors promise to fundamentally change biomedical research and treatment monitoring in neurological diseases such as PD, creating a new domain of digital biomarkers. Objectives: The present study assessed the feasibility, reliability, and validity of smartphone‐based digital biomarkers of PD in a clinical trial setting. Methods: During a 6‐month, phase 1b clinical trial with 44 Parkinson participants, and an independent, 45‐day study in 35 age‐matched healthy controls, participants completed six daily motor active tests (sustained phonation, rest tremor, postural tremor, finger‐tapping, balance, and gait), then carried the smartphone during the day (passive monitoring), enabling assessment of, for example, time spent walking and sit‐to‐stand transitions by gyroscopic and accelerometer data. Results: Adherence was acceptable: Patients completed active testing on average 3.5 of 7 times/week. Sensor‐based features showed moderate‐to‐excellent test‐retest reliability (average intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.84). All active and passive features significantly differentiated PD from controls with P < 0.005. All active test features except sustained phonation were significantly related to corresponding International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society–Sponsored UPRDS clinical severity ratings. On passive monitoring, time spent walking had a significant (P = 0.005) relationship with average postural instability and gait disturbance scores. Of note, for all smartphone active and passive features except postural tremor, the monitoring procedure detected abnormalities even in those Parkinson participants scored as having no signs in the corresponding International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society–Sponsored UPRDS items at the site visit. Conclusions: These findings demonstrate the feasibility of smartphone‐based digital biomarkers and indicate that smartphone‐sensor technologies provide reliable, valid, clinically meaningful, and highly sensitive phenotypic data in Parkinson's disease. © 2018 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
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spelling pubmed-61753182018-10-15 Evaluation of smartphone‐based testing to generate exploratory outcome measures in a phase 1 Parkinson's disease clinical trial Lipsmeier, Florian Taylor, Kirsten I. Kilchenmann, Timothy Wolf, Detlef Scotland, Alf Schjodt‐Eriksen, Jens Cheng, Wei‐Yi Fernandez‐Garcia, Ignacio Siebourg‐Polster, Juliane Jin, Liping Soto, Jay Verselis, Lynne Boess, Frank Koller, Martin Grundman, Michael Monsch, Andreas U. Postuma, Ronald B. Ghosh, Anirvan Kremer, Thomas Czech, Christian Gossens, Christian Lindemann, Michael Mov Disord Regular Issue Articles Background: Ubiquitous digital technologies such as smartphone sensors promise to fundamentally change biomedical research and treatment monitoring in neurological diseases such as PD, creating a new domain of digital biomarkers. Objectives: The present study assessed the feasibility, reliability, and validity of smartphone‐based digital biomarkers of PD in a clinical trial setting. Methods: During a 6‐month, phase 1b clinical trial with 44 Parkinson participants, and an independent, 45‐day study in 35 age‐matched healthy controls, participants completed six daily motor active tests (sustained phonation, rest tremor, postural tremor, finger‐tapping, balance, and gait), then carried the smartphone during the day (passive monitoring), enabling assessment of, for example, time spent walking and sit‐to‐stand transitions by gyroscopic and accelerometer data. Results: Adherence was acceptable: Patients completed active testing on average 3.5 of 7 times/week. Sensor‐based features showed moderate‐to‐excellent test‐retest reliability (average intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.84). All active and passive features significantly differentiated PD from controls with P < 0.005. All active test features except sustained phonation were significantly related to corresponding International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society–Sponsored UPRDS clinical severity ratings. On passive monitoring, time spent walking had a significant (P = 0.005) relationship with average postural instability and gait disturbance scores. Of note, for all smartphone active and passive features except postural tremor, the monitoring procedure detected abnormalities even in those Parkinson participants scored as having no signs in the corresponding International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society–Sponsored UPRDS items at the site visit. Conclusions: These findings demonstrate the feasibility of smartphone‐based digital biomarkers and indicate that smartphone‐sensor technologies provide reliable, valid, clinically meaningful, and highly sensitive phenotypic data in Parkinson's disease. © 2018 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018-04-27 2018-08 /pmc/articles/PMC6175318/ /pubmed/29701258 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mds.27376 Text en © 2018 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Regular Issue Articles
Lipsmeier, Florian
Taylor, Kirsten I.
Kilchenmann, Timothy
Wolf, Detlef
Scotland, Alf
Schjodt‐Eriksen, Jens
Cheng, Wei‐Yi
Fernandez‐Garcia, Ignacio
Siebourg‐Polster, Juliane
Jin, Liping
Soto, Jay
Verselis, Lynne
Boess, Frank
Koller, Martin
Grundman, Michael
Monsch, Andreas U.
Postuma, Ronald B.
Ghosh, Anirvan
Kremer, Thomas
Czech, Christian
Gossens, Christian
Lindemann, Michael
Evaluation of smartphone‐based testing to generate exploratory outcome measures in a phase 1 Parkinson's disease clinical trial
title Evaluation of smartphone‐based testing to generate exploratory outcome measures in a phase 1 Parkinson's disease clinical trial
title_full Evaluation of smartphone‐based testing to generate exploratory outcome measures in a phase 1 Parkinson's disease clinical trial
title_fullStr Evaluation of smartphone‐based testing to generate exploratory outcome measures in a phase 1 Parkinson's disease clinical trial
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of smartphone‐based testing to generate exploratory outcome measures in a phase 1 Parkinson's disease clinical trial
title_short Evaluation of smartphone‐based testing to generate exploratory outcome measures in a phase 1 Parkinson's disease clinical trial
title_sort evaluation of smartphone‐based testing to generate exploratory outcome measures in a phase 1 parkinson's disease clinical trial
topic Regular Issue Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6175318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29701258
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mds.27376
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