Use of hip- versus wrist-based actigraphy for assessing functional decline and disease progression in patients with motor neuron disease

Author:

Holdom Cory J.,van Unnik Jordi W. J.,van Eijk Ruben P. A.,van den Berg Leonard H.,Henderson Robert D.,Ngo Shyuan T.,Steyn Frederik J.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Actigraphy has been proposed as a measure for tracking functional decline and disease progression in patients with Motor Neuron Disease (MND). There is, however, little evidence to show that wrist-based actigraphy measures correlate with functional decline, and no consensus on how best to implement actigraphy. We report on the use of wrist actigraphy to show decreased activity in patients compared to controls, and compared the utility of wrist- and hip-based actigraphy for assessing functional decline in patients with MND. Methods In this multi-cohort, multi-centre, natural history study, wrist- and hip-based actigraphy were assessed in 139 patients with MND (wrist, n = 97; hip, n = 42) and 56 non-neurological control participants (wrist, n = 56). For patients with MND, longitudinal measures were contrasted with clinical outcomes commonly used to define functional decline. Results Patients with MND have reduced wrist-based actigraphy scores when compared to controls (median differences: prop. active = − 0.053 [− 0.075, − 0.026], variation axis 1 = − 0.073 [− 0.112, − 0.021]). When comparing wrist- and hip-based measures, hip-based accelerometery had stronger correlations with disease progression (prop. active: τ = 0.20 vs 0.12; variation axis 1: τ = 0.33 vs 0.23), whereas baseline wrist-based accelerometery was better related with future decline in fine-motor function (τ = 0.14–0.23 vs 0.06–0.16). Conclusions Actigraphy outcomes measured from the wrist are more variable than from the hip and present differing sensitivity to specific functional outcomes. Outcomes and analysis should be carefully constructed to maximise benefit, should wrist-worn devices be used for at-home monitoring of disease progression in patients with MND.

Funder

Honda Foundation

Wesley Medical Research

FightMND

MND and Me Foundation

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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