False Atrial Fibrillation Alerts from Smartwatches are Associated with Decreased Perceived Physical Well-being and Confidence in Chronic Symptoms Management

Author:

Tran Khanh-Van1,Filippaios Andreas1,Noorishirazi Kamran2,Ding Eric3,Han Dong4ORCID,Mohagheghian Fahimeh4,Dai Qiying5,Mehawej Jordy5,Wang Ziyue1,Lessard Darleen1,Otabil Edith Mensah2,Hamel Alex2ORCID,Paul Tenes1,Gottbrecht Matthew1,Fitzgibbons Timothy1,Saczynski Jane6,Chon Ki4,McManus David3

Affiliation:

1. University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School

2. University of Massachusetts

3. University of Massachusetts Medical School

4. University of Connecticut

5. Saint Vincent Hospital

6. Northeastern University

Abstract

Abstract Wrist-based wearables have been FDA approved for AF detection. However, the health behavior impact of false AF alerts from wearables on older patients at high risk for AF are not known. In this work, we analyzed data from the Pulsewatch (NCT03761394) study, which randomized patients (≥ 50 years) with history of stroke or transient ischemic attack to wear a patch monitor and a smartwatch linked to a smartphone running the Pulsewatch application vs to only the cardiac patch monitor over 14 days. At baseline and 14 days, participants completed validated instruments to assess for anxiety, patient activation, perceived mental and physical health, chronic symptom management self-efficacy, and medicine adherence. We employed linear regression to examine associations between false AF alerts with change in patient-reported outcomes. Receipt of false AF alerts was related to a dose-dependent decline in self-perceived physical health and levels of disease self-management. We developed a novel convolutional denoising autoencoder (CDA) to remove motion and noise artifacts in photoplethysmography (PPG) segments to optimize AF detection, which substantially reduced the number of false alerts. A promising approach to avoid negative impact of false alerts is to employ artificial intelligence driven algorithms to improve accuracy.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference49 articles.

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2. Kernan, W.N. et al. Guidelines for the prevention of stroke in patients with stroke and transient ischemic attack: a guideline for healthcare professionals from the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association. Stroke 45, 2160 – 236 (2014).

3. Stratifying Stroke Risk in Atrial Fibrillation: Beyond Clinical Risk Scores;Yaghi S;Stroke,2017

4. Stroke as the Initial Manifestation of Atrial Fibrillation: The Framingham Heart Study;Lubitz SA;Stroke,2017

5. Screening for Atrial Fibrillation: US Preventive Services Task Force Recommendation Statement;Force USPST;JAMA,2022

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