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Quality Evaluation of Free-living Validation Studies for the Assessment of 24-Hour Physical Behavior in Adults via Wearables: Systematic Review

BACKGROUND: Wearable technology is a leading fitness trend in the growing commercial industry and an established method for collecting 24-hour physical behavior data in research studies. High-quality free-living validation studies are required to enable both researchers and consumers to make guided...

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Autores principales: Giurgiu, Marco, Timm, Irina, Becker, Marlissa, Schmidt, Steffen, Wunsch, Kathrin, Nissen, Rebecca, Davidovski, Denis, Bussmann, Johannes B J, Nigg, Claudio R, Reichert, Markus, Ebner-Priemer, Ulrich W, Woll, Alexander, von Haaren-Mack, Birte
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9227659/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35679106
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/36377
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author Giurgiu, Marco
Timm, Irina
Becker, Marlissa
Schmidt, Steffen
Wunsch, Kathrin
Nissen, Rebecca
Davidovski, Denis
Bussmann, Johannes B J
Nigg, Claudio R
Reichert, Markus
Ebner-Priemer, Ulrich W
Woll, Alexander
von Haaren-Mack, Birte
author_facet Giurgiu, Marco
Timm, Irina
Becker, Marlissa
Schmidt, Steffen
Wunsch, Kathrin
Nissen, Rebecca
Davidovski, Denis
Bussmann, Johannes B J
Nigg, Claudio R
Reichert, Markus
Ebner-Priemer, Ulrich W
Woll, Alexander
von Haaren-Mack, Birte
author_sort Giurgiu, Marco
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Wearable technology is a leading fitness trend in the growing commercial industry and an established method for collecting 24-hour physical behavior data in research studies. High-quality free-living validation studies are required to enable both researchers and consumers to make guided decisions on which study to rely on and which device to use. However, reviews focusing on the quality of free-living validation studies in adults are lacking. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to raise researchers’ and consumers’ attention to the quality of published validation protocols while aiming to identify and compare specific consistencies or inconsistencies between protocols. We aimed to provide a comprehensive and historical overview of which wearable devices have been validated for which purpose and whether they show promise for use in further studies. METHODS: Peer-reviewed validation studies from electronic databases, as well as backward and forward citation searches (1970 to July 2021), with the following, required indicators were included: protocol must include real-life conditions, outcome must belong to one dimension of the 24-hour physical behavior construct (intensity, posture or activity type, and biological state), the protocol must include a criterion measure, and study results must be published in English-language journals. The risk of bias was evaluated using the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies-2 tool with 9 questions separated into 4 domains (patient selection or study design, index measure, criterion measure, and flow and time). RESULTS: Of the 13,285 unique search results, 222 (1.67%) articles were included. Most studies (153/237, 64.6%) validated an intensity measure outcome such as energy expenditure. However, only 19.8% (47/237) validated biological state and 15.6% (37/237) validated posture or activity-type outcomes. Across all studies, 163 different wearables were identified. Of these, 58.9% (96/163) were validated only once. ActiGraph GT3X/GT3X+ (36/163, 22.1%), Fitbit Flex (20/163, 12.3%), and ActivPAL (12/163, 7.4%) were used most often in the included studies. The percentage of participants meeting the quality criteria ranged from 38.8% (92/237) to 92.4% (219/237). On the basis of our classification tree to evaluate the overall study quality, 4.6% (11/237) of studies were classified as low risk. Furthermore, 16% (38/237) of studies were classified as having some concerns, and 72.9% (173/237) of studies were classified as high risk. CONCLUSIONS: Overall, free-living validation studies of wearables are characterized by low methodological quality, large variability in design, and focus on intensity. Future research should strongly aim at biological state and posture or activity outcomes and strive for standardized protocols embedded in a validation framework. Standardized protocols for free-living validation embedded in a framework are urgently needed to inform and guide stakeholders (eg, manufacturers, scientists, and consumers) in selecting wearables for self-tracking purposes, applying wearables in health studies, and fostering innovation to achieve improved validity.
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spelling pubmed-92276592022-06-25 Quality Evaluation of Free-living Validation Studies for the Assessment of 24-Hour Physical Behavior in Adults via Wearables: Systematic Review Giurgiu, Marco Timm, Irina Becker, Marlissa Schmidt, Steffen Wunsch, Kathrin Nissen, Rebecca Davidovski, Denis Bussmann, Johannes B J Nigg, Claudio R Reichert, Markus Ebner-Priemer, Ulrich W Woll, Alexander von Haaren-Mack, Birte JMIR Mhealth Uhealth Review BACKGROUND: Wearable technology is a leading fitness trend in the growing commercial industry and an established method for collecting 24-hour physical behavior data in research studies. High-quality free-living validation studies are required to enable both researchers and consumers to make guided decisions on which study to rely on and which device to use. However, reviews focusing on the quality of free-living validation studies in adults are lacking. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to raise researchers’ and consumers’ attention to the quality of published validation protocols while aiming to identify and compare specific consistencies or inconsistencies between protocols. We aimed to provide a comprehensive and historical overview of which wearable devices have been validated for which purpose and whether they show promise for use in further studies. METHODS: Peer-reviewed validation studies from electronic databases, as well as backward and forward citation searches (1970 to July 2021), with the following, required indicators were included: protocol must include real-life conditions, outcome must belong to one dimension of the 24-hour physical behavior construct (intensity, posture or activity type, and biological state), the protocol must include a criterion measure, and study results must be published in English-language journals. The risk of bias was evaluated using the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies-2 tool with 9 questions separated into 4 domains (patient selection or study design, index measure, criterion measure, and flow and time). RESULTS: Of the 13,285 unique search results, 222 (1.67%) articles were included. Most studies (153/237, 64.6%) validated an intensity measure outcome such as energy expenditure. However, only 19.8% (47/237) validated biological state and 15.6% (37/237) validated posture or activity-type outcomes. Across all studies, 163 different wearables were identified. Of these, 58.9% (96/163) were validated only once. ActiGraph GT3X/GT3X+ (36/163, 22.1%), Fitbit Flex (20/163, 12.3%), and ActivPAL (12/163, 7.4%) were used most often in the included studies. The percentage of participants meeting the quality criteria ranged from 38.8% (92/237) to 92.4% (219/237). On the basis of our classification tree to evaluate the overall study quality, 4.6% (11/237) of studies were classified as low risk. Furthermore, 16% (38/237) of studies were classified as having some concerns, and 72.9% (173/237) of studies were classified as high risk. CONCLUSIONS: Overall, free-living validation studies of wearables are characterized by low methodological quality, large variability in design, and focus on intensity. Future research should strongly aim at biological state and posture or activity outcomes and strive for standardized protocols embedded in a validation framework. Standardized protocols for free-living validation embedded in a framework are urgently needed to inform and guide stakeholders (eg, manufacturers, scientists, and consumers) in selecting wearables for self-tracking purposes, applying wearables in health studies, and fostering innovation to achieve improved validity. JMIR Publications 2022-06-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9227659/ /pubmed/35679106 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/36377 Text en ©Marco Giurgiu, Irina Timm, Marlissa Becker, Steffen Schmidt, Kathrin Wunsch, Rebecca Nissen, Denis Davidovski, Johannes B J Bussmann, Claudio R Nigg, Markus Reichert, Ulrich W Ebner-Priemer, Alexander Woll, Birte von Haaren-Mack. Originally published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth (https://mhealth.jmir.org), 09.06.2022. 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 JMIR mHealth and uHealth, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://mhealth.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Review
Giurgiu, Marco
Timm, Irina
Becker, Marlissa
Schmidt, Steffen
Wunsch, Kathrin
Nissen, Rebecca
Davidovski, Denis
Bussmann, Johannes B J
Nigg, Claudio R
Reichert, Markus
Ebner-Priemer, Ulrich W
Woll, Alexander
von Haaren-Mack, Birte
Quality Evaluation of Free-living Validation Studies for the Assessment of 24-Hour Physical Behavior in Adults via Wearables: Systematic Review
title Quality Evaluation of Free-living Validation Studies for the Assessment of 24-Hour Physical Behavior in Adults via Wearables: Systematic Review
title_full Quality Evaluation of Free-living Validation Studies for the Assessment of 24-Hour Physical Behavior in Adults via Wearables: Systematic Review
title_fullStr Quality Evaluation of Free-living Validation Studies for the Assessment of 24-Hour Physical Behavior in Adults via Wearables: Systematic Review
title_full_unstemmed Quality Evaluation of Free-living Validation Studies for the Assessment of 24-Hour Physical Behavior in Adults via Wearables: Systematic Review
title_short Quality Evaluation of Free-living Validation Studies for the Assessment of 24-Hour Physical Behavior in Adults via Wearables: Systematic Review
title_sort quality evaluation of free-living validation studies for the assessment of 24-hour physical behavior in adults via wearables: systematic review
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9227659/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35679106
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/36377
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