A standardized workflow for long-term longitudinal actigraphy data processing: One year of continuous actigraphy from the CAN-BIND Wellness Monitoring Study

Author:

Slyepchenko Anastasiya1,Uher Rudolf2,Ho Keith3,Hassel Stefanie4,Matthews Craig1,Lukus Patricia K.5,Daros Alexander R.6,Minarik Anna2,Placenza Franca7,Li Qingqin S8,Rotzinger Susan3,Parikh Sagar V.9,Foster Jane A.1,Turecki Gustavo10,Müller Daniel J.6,Taylor Valerie H.4,Quilty Lena C.6,Milev Roumen11,Soares Claudio N.11,Kennedy Sidney H.3,Lam Raymond W.12,Frey Benicio N.1

Affiliation:

1. McMaster University

2. Dalhousie University

3. St. Michael’s Hospital

4. University of Calgary

5. St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton

6. Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

7. University of Toronto

8. Janssen Research & Development, LLC

9. University of Michigan

10. McGill University

11. Queen’s University and Providence Care Hospital

12. University of British Columbia

Abstract

Abstract Monitoring sleep and activity through wearable devices such as wrist-worn actigraphs has the potential for long-term measurement in the individual’s own environment. Long periods of data collection require a complex approach, including standardized pre-processing and data trimming, and robust algorithms to address non-wear and missing data. In this study, we used a data-driven approach to quality control, pre-processing and analysis of longitudinal actigraphy data collected over the course of 1 year in a sample of 95 participants. We implemented a data processing pipeline using open-source packages for longitudinal data thereby providing a framework for treating missing data patterns, non-wear scoring, sleep/wake scoring, and conducted a sensitivity analysis to demonstrate the impact of non-wear and missing data on the relationship between sleep variables and depressive symptoms. Compliance with actigraph wear decreased over time, with missing data proportion increasing from a mean of 4.8% in the first week to 23.6% at the end of the 12 months of data collection. Sensitivity analyses demonstrated the importance of defining a pre-processing threshold, as it substantially impacts the predictive value of variables on sleep-related outcomes. We developed a novel non-wear algorithm which outperformed several other algorithms and a capacitive wear sensor in quality control. These findings provide essential insight informing study design in digital health research.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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