Using a smartphone-based self-management platform to study sex differences in Parkinson’s disease: multicenter, cross-sectional pilot study

Author:

Xu Zhiheng,Jin Lirong,Chen Weijie,Hu Tianyu,Li Shiyu,Liang Xiaoniu,Han Xixi,Chen Yi,Tang Yilin,Wang Jian,Wu Danhong

Abstract

Abstract Background Patient-reported outcome (PRO) is a distinct and indispensable dimension of clinical characteristics and recent advances have made remote PRO measurement possible. Sex difference in PRO of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is hardly extensively researched. Methods A smartphone-based self-management platform, offering remote PRO measurement for PD patients, has been developed. A total of 1828 PD patients, including 1001 male patients and 827 female patients, were enrolled and completed their PRO submission through this platform. Results Sex differences in PROs have been identified. The female group had a significantly lower height, weight, and body mass index (BMI) than the male group (P < 0.001). For motor symptoms, a higher proportion of patients reporting dyskinesia was observed in the female group. For non-motor symptoms, there is a higher percentage (P < 0.001) as well as severity (P = 0.016) of depression in the female group. More male patients reported hyposmia, lisp, drooling, dysuria, frequent urination, hypersexuality, impotence, daytime sleepiness, and apathy than females (P < 0.05). In contrast, more female patients reported headache, palpation, body pain, anorexia, nausea, urinal incontinence, anxiety, insomnia (P < 0.05) than males. Conclusions We provide evidence for sex differences in PD through the data collected from our platform. These results highlighted the importance of gender in clinical decision-making, and also support the feasibility of remote PRO measurement through a smartphone-based self-management platform in patients with PD.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Health Commission of China

Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project

Shanghai Minhang District Health and Family Planning Commission

Cooperation Programme of Fudan University – Minhang District Joint Health Center

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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