Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurological Sciences University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha Nebraska USA
2. Department of Internal Medicine University of Central Florida Orlando Florida USA
3. Department of Neurology University of Iowa Iowa City Iowa USA
4. Neurology Service Iowa City VA Medical Center Iowa City Iowa USA
Abstract
ABSTRACTBackgroundDriving is a complex, everyday task that impacts patient agency, safety, mobility, social connections, and quality of life. Digital tools can provide comprehensive real‐world (RW) data on driver behavior in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), providing critical data on disease status and treatment efficacy in the patient's own environment.ObjectiveThis pilot study examined the use of driving data as a RW digital biomarker of PD symptom severity and dopaminergic therapy effectiveness.MethodsNaturalistic driving data (3974 drives) were collected for 1 month from 30 idiopathic PD drivers treated with dopaminergic medications. Prescriptions data were used to calculate levodopa equivalent daily dose (LEDD). The association between LEDD and driver mobility (number of drives) was assessed across PD severity, measured by the Movement Disorder Society Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS‐UPDRS).ResultsPD drivers with worse motor symptoms based on self‐report (Part II: P = 0.02) and clinical examination (Part III: P < 0.001) showed greater decrements in driver mobility. LEDD levels >400 mg/day were associated with higher driver mobility than those with worse PD symptoms (Part I: P = 0.02, Part II: P < 0.001, Part III: P < 0.001).ConclusionsResults suggest that comprehensive RW driving data on PD patients may index disease status and treatment effectiveness to improve patient symptoms, safety, mobility, and independence. Higher dopaminergic treatment may enhance safe driver mobility in PD patients with worse symptom severity.
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Neurology
Cited by
1 articles.
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