logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Virtual exam for Parkinson’s disease enables frequent and reliable remote measurements of motor function

Medicine and Health

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

M. Burq, E. Rinaldi, et al.

Explore the groundbreaking study by Maximilian Burq and colleagues that reveals how a smartphone-based active assessment can effectively monitor motor function in Parkinson's disease, offering insights beyond traditional clinical evaluations. This innovative approach showcases the potential of remote monitoring to enhance patient care.

00:00
00:00
~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
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 smartphone-based active assessment that enables unsupervised measurement of motor signs of PD. Participants with early-stage PD (N = 388, 46% 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 pre-protocol remote assessments were completed. Analytical validation was established for in-clinic measurements, which showed moderate-to-strong correlations with consensus MDS-UPDRS Part II ratings for rest tremor (r = 0.62), bradykinesia (r = 0.70), and gait (r = 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 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.
Publisher
npj Digital Medicine
Published On
May 23, 2022
Authors
Maximilian Burq, Eran Rinaldi, King Chung Ho, Chen Chen, Bastian R. Bloem, Lance Myer, William J. Marks Jr., Ritu Kapur
Tags
Parkinson's disease
remote monitoring
smartphone assessment
motor function
dopaminergic medication
reliability
clinical ratings
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny