Cargando…

Recommendations for Defining and Reporting Adherence Measured by Biometric Monitoring Technologies: Systematic Review

BACKGROUND: Suboptimal adherence to data collection procedures or a study intervention is often the cause of a failed clinical trial. Data from connected sensors, including wearables, referred to here as biometric monitoring technologies (BioMeTs), are capable of capturing adherence to both digital...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Olaye, Iredia M, Belovsky, Mia P, Bataille, Lauren, Cheng, Royce, Ciger, Ali, Fortuna, Karen L, Izmailova, Elena S, McCall, Debbe, Miller, Christopher J, Muehlhausen, Willie, Northcott, Carrie A, Rodriguez-Chavez, Isaac R, Pratap, Abhishek, Vandendriessche, Benjamin, Zisman-Ilani, Yaara, Bakker, Jessie P
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9052021/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35436221
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/33537
_version_ 1784696694705750016
author Olaye, Iredia M
Belovsky, Mia P
Bataille, Lauren
Cheng, Royce
Ciger, Ali
Fortuna, Karen L
Izmailova, Elena S
McCall, Debbe
Miller, Christopher J
Muehlhausen, Willie
Northcott, Carrie A
Rodriguez-Chavez, Isaac R
Pratap, Abhishek
Vandendriessche, Benjamin
Zisman-Ilani, Yaara
Bakker, Jessie P
author_facet Olaye, Iredia M
Belovsky, Mia P
Bataille, Lauren
Cheng, Royce
Ciger, Ali
Fortuna, Karen L
Izmailova, Elena S
McCall, Debbe
Miller, Christopher J
Muehlhausen, Willie
Northcott, Carrie A
Rodriguez-Chavez, Isaac R
Pratap, Abhishek
Vandendriessche, Benjamin
Zisman-Ilani, Yaara
Bakker, Jessie P
author_sort Olaye, Iredia M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Suboptimal adherence to data collection procedures or a study intervention is often the cause of a failed clinical trial. Data from connected sensors, including wearables, referred to here as biometric monitoring technologies (BioMeTs), are capable of capturing adherence to both digital therapeutics and digital data collection procedures, thereby providing the opportunity to identify the determinants of adherence and thereafter, methods to maximize adherence. OBJECTIVE: We aim to describe the methods and definitions by which adherence has been captured and reported using BioMeTs in recent years. Identifying key gaps allowed us to make recommendations regarding minimum reporting requirements and consistency of definitions for BioMeT-based adherence data. METHODS: We conducted a systematic review of studies published between 2014 and 2019, which deployed a BioMeT outside the clinical or laboratory setting for which a quantitative, nonsurrogate, sensor-based measurement of adherence was reported. After systematically screening the manuscripts for eligibility, we extracted details regarding study design, participants, the BioMeT or BioMeTs used, and the definition and units of adherence. The primary definitions of adherence were categorized as a continuous variable based on duration (highest resolution), a continuous variable based on the number of measurements completed, or a categorical variable (lowest resolution). RESULTS: Our PubMed search terms identified 940 manuscripts; 100 (10.6%) met our eligibility criteria and contained descriptions of 110 BioMeTs. During literature screening, we found that 30% (53/177) of the studies that used a BioMeT outside of the clinical or laboratory setting failed to report a sensor-based, nonsurrogate, quantitative measurement of adherence. We identified 37 unique definitions of adherence reported for the 110 BioMeTs and observed that uniformity of adherence definitions was associated with the resolution of the data reported. When adherence was reported as a continuous time-based variable, the same definition of adherence was adopted for 92% (46/50) of the tools. However, when adherence data were simplified to a categorical variable, we observed 25 unique definitions of adherence reported for 37 tools. CONCLUSIONS: We recommend that quantitative, nonsurrogate, sensor-based adherence data be reported for all BioMeTs when feasible; a clear description of the sensor or sensors used to capture adherence data, the algorithm or algorithms that convert sample-level measurements to a metric of adherence, and the analytic validation data demonstrating that BioMeT-generated adherence is an accurate and reliable measurement of actual use be provided when available; and primary adherence data be reported as a continuous variable followed by categorical definitions if needed, and that the categories adopted are supported by clinical validation data and/or consistent with previous reports.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9052021
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-90520212022-04-30 Recommendations for Defining and Reporting Adherence Measured by Biometric Monitoring Technologies: Systematic Review Olaye, Iredia M Belovsky, Mia P Bataille, Lauren Cheng, Royce Ciger, Ali Fortuna, Karen L Izmailova, Elena S McCall, Debbe Miller, Christopher J Muehlhausen, Willie Northcott, Carrie A Rodriguez-Chavez, Isaac R Pratap, Abhishek Vandendriessche, Benjamin Zisman-Ilani, Yaara Bakker, Jessie P J Med Internet Res Review BACKGROUND: Suboptimal adherence to data collection procedures or a study intervention is often the cause of a failed clinical trial. Data from connected sensors, including wearables, referred to here as biometric monitoring technologies (BioMeTs), are capable of capturing adherence to both digital therapeutics and digital data collection procedures, thereby providing the opportunity to identify the determinants of adherence and thereafter, methods to maximize adherence. OBJECTIVE: We aim to describe the methods and definitions by which adherence has been captured and reported using BioMeTs in recent years. Identifying key gaps allowed us to make recommendations regarding minimum reporting requirements and consistency of definitions for BioMeT-based adherence data. METHODS: We conducted a systematic review of studies published between 2014 and 2019, which deployed a BioMeT outside the clinical or laboratory setting for which a quantitative, nonsurrogate, sensor-based measurement of adherence was reported. After systematically screening the manuscripts for eligibility, we extracted details regarding study design, participants, the BioMeT or BioMeTs used, and the definition and units of adherence. The primary definitions of adherence were categorized as a continuous variable based on duration (highest resolution), a continuous variable based on the number of measurements completed, or a categorical variable (lowest resolution). RESULTS: Our PubMed search terms identified 940 manuscripts; 100 (10.6%) met our eligibility criteria and contained descriptions of 110 BioMeTs. During literature screening, we found that 30% (53/177) of the studies that used a BioMeT outside of the clinical or laboratory setting failed to report a sensor-based, nonsurrogate, quantitative measurement of adherence. We identified 37 unique definitions of adherence reported for the 110 BioMeTs and observed that uniformity of adherence definitions was associated with the resolution of the data reported. When adherence was reported as a continuous time-based variable, the same definition of adherence was adopted for 92% (46/50) of the tools. However, when adherence data were simplified to a categorical variable, we observed 25 unique definitions of adherence reported for 37 tools. CONCLUSIONS: We recommend that quantitative, nonsurrogate, sensor-based adherence data be reported for all BioMeTs when feasible; a clear description of the sensor or sensors used to capture adherence data, the algorithm or algorithms that convert sample-level measurements to a metric of adherence, and the analytic validation data demonstrating that BioMeT-generated adherence is an accurate and reliable measurement of actual use be provided when available; and primary adherence data be reported as a continuous variable followed by categorical definitions if needed, and that the categories adopted are supported by clinical validation data and/or consistent with previous reports. JMIR Publications 2022-04-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9052021/ /pubmed/35436221 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/33537 Text en ©Iredia M Olaye, Mia P Belovsky, Lauren Bataille, Royce Cheng, Ali Ciger, Karen L Fortuna, Elena S Izmailova, Debbe McCall, Christopher J Miller, Willie Muehlhausen, Carrie A Northcott, Isaac R Rodriguez-Chavez, Abhishek Pratap, Benjamin Vandendriessche, Yaara Zisman-Ilani, Jessie P Bakker. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (https://www.jmir.org), 14.04.2022. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Review
Olaye, Iredia M
Belovsky, Mia P
Bataille, Lauren
Cheng, Royce
Ciger, Ali
Fortuna, Karen L
Izmailova, Elena S
McCall, Debbe
Miller, Christopher J
Muehlhausen, Willie
Northcott, Carrie A
Rodriguez-Chavez, Isaac R
Pratap, Abhishek
Vandendriessche, Benjamin
Zisman-Ilani, Yaara
Bakker, Jessie P
Recommendations for Defining and Reporting Adherence Measured by Biometric Monitoring Technologies: Systematic Review
title Recommendations for Defining and Reporting Adherence Measured by Biometric Monitoring Technologies: Systematic Review
title_full Recommendations for Defining and Reporting Adherence Measured by Biometric Monitoring Technologies: Systematic Review
title_fullStr Recommendations for Defining and Reporting Adherence Measured by Biometric Monitoring Technologies: Systematic Review
title_full_unstemmed Recommendations for Defining and Reporting Adherence Measured by Biometric Monitoring Technologies: Systematic Review
title_short Recommendations for Defining and Reporting Adherence Measured by Biometric Monitoring Technologies: Systematic Review
title_sort recommendations for defining and reporting adherence measured by biometric monitoring technologies: systematic review
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9052021/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35436221
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/33537
work_keys_str_mv AT olayeirediam recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT belovskymiap recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT bataillelauren recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT chengroyce recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT cigerali recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT fortunakarenl recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT izmailovaelenas recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT mccalldebbe recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT millerchristopherj recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT muehlhausenwillie recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT northcottcarriea recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT rodriguezchavezisaacr recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT pratapabhishek recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT vandendriesschebenjamin recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT zismanilaniyaara recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview
AT bakkerjessiep recommendationsfordefiningandreportingadherencemeasuredbybiometricmonitoringtechnologiessystematicreview