Wearable health devices and personal area networks: can they improve outcomes in haemodialysis patients?

Author:

Kooman Jeroen P1,Wieringa Fokko Pieter23,Han Maggie4,Chaudhuri Sheetal35,van der Sande Frank M1,Usvyat Len A5,Kotanko Peter4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Nephrology, University Hospital Maastricht, Maastricht, The Netherlands

2. Connected Health Solutions, imec, Eindhoven, The Netherlands

3. Faculty of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands

4. Renal Research Institute, New York, NY, USA

5. Global Medical Office, Fresenius Medical Care, Waltham, MA, USA

Abstract

AbstractDigitization of healthcare will be a major innovation driver in the coming decade. Also, enabled by technological advancements and electronics miniaturization, wearable health device (WHD) applications are expected to grow exponentially. This, in turn, may make 4P medicine (predictive, precise, preventive and personalized) a more attainable goal within dialysis patient care. This article discusses different use cases where WHD could be of relevance for dialysis patient care, i.e. measurement of heart rate, arrhythmia detection, blood pressure, hyperkalaemia, fluid overload and physical activity. After adequate validation of the different WHD in this specific population, data obtained from WHD could form part of a body area network (BAN), which could serve different purposes such as feedback on actionable parameters like physical inactivity, fluid overload, danger signalling or event prediction. For a BAN to become clinical reality, not only must technical issues, cybersecurity and data privacy be addressed, but also adequate models based on artificial intelligence and mathematical analysis need to be developed for signal optimization, data representation, data reliability labelling and interpretation. Moreover, the potential of WHD and BAN can only be fulfilled if they are part of a transformative healthcare system with a shared responsibility between patients, healthcare providers and the payors, using a step-up approach that may include digital assistants and dedicated ‘digital clinics’. The coming decade will be critical in observing how these developments will impact and transform dialysis patient care and will undoubtedly ask for an increased ‘digital literacy’ for all those implicated in their care.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Transplantation,Nephrology

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