4.7 Article

Virtual exam for Parkinson's disease enables frequent and reliable remote measurements of motor function

Journal

NPJ DIGITAL MEDICINE
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41746-022-00607-8

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Sensor-based remote monitoring using smartwatches can accurately measure motor signs of Parkinson's disease and provide reliable data. These measurements are sensitive to medication-induced changes and have good reliability, which can help reduce sample sizes in research studies.
Sensor-based remote monitoring could help better track Parkinson's disease (PD) progression, and measure patients' response to putative disease-modifying therapeutic interventions. To be useful, the remotely-collected measurements should be valid, reliable, and sensitive to change, and people with PD must engage with the technology. We developed a smartwatch-based active assessment that enables unsupervised measurement of motor signs of PD. Participants with early-stage PD (N= 388, 64% men, average age 63) wore a smartwatch for a median of 390 days. Participants performed unsupervised motor tasks both in-clinic (once) and remotely (twice weekly for one year). Dropout rate was 5.4%. Median wear-time was 21.1 h/day, and 59% of per-protocol remote assessments were completed. Analytical validation was established for in-clinic measurements, which showed moderate-to-strong correlations with consensus MDSUPDRS Part III ratings for rest tremor (rho= 0.70), bradykinesia (rho=-0.62), and gait (rho=-0.46). Test-retest reliability of remote measurements, aggregated monthly, was good-to-excellent (ICC= 0.75-0.96). Remote measurements were sensitive to the known effects of dopaminergic medication (on vs off Cohen's d= 0.19-0.54). Of note, in-clinic assessments often did not reflect the patients' typical status at home. This demonstrates the feasibility of smartwatch-based unsupervised active tests, and establishes the analytical validity of associated digital measurements. Weekly measurements provide a real-life distribution of disease severity, as it fluctuates longitudinally. Sensitivity to medication-induced change and improved reliability imply that these methods could help reduce sample sizes needed to demonstrate a response to therapeutic interventions or disease progression.

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