Abstract
AbstractIntroductionThis study evaluated the performance of a wrist-worn wearable, Verily Study Watch (VSW), in detecting key sleep measures against polysomnography (PSG).MethodsWe collected data from 41 adults without obstructive sleep apnea or insomnia during a single overnight laboratory visit. We evaluated epoch-by-epoch performance for sleep versus wake classification, sleep stage classification and duration, total sleep time (TST), wake after sleep onset (WASO), sleep onset latency (SOL), sleep efficiency (SE), and number of awakenings (NAWK). Performance metrics included sensitivity, specificity, Cohen’s kappa, and Bland-Altman analyses.ResultsSensitivity and specificity (95% CIs) of sleep versus wake classification were 0.97 (0.96, 0.98) and 0.70 (0.66, 0.74), respectively. Cohen’s kappa (95% CI) for 4-class stage detection was 0.64 (0.18, 0.82). Most VSW sleep measures had proportional bias. The mean bias values (95% CI) were 14.0 minutes (5.55, 23.20) for TST, - 13.1 minutes (-21.33, -6.21) for WASO, 2.97% (1.25, 4.84) for SE, -1.34 minutes (-7.29, 4.81) for SOL, 1.91 minutes (-8.28, 11.98) forlight sleepduration, 5.24 minutes (-3.35, 14.13) fordeep sleepduration, and 6.39 minutes (-0.68, 13.18) forREM sleepduration. Mean and median NAWK count differences (95% CI) were 0.05 (-0.42, 0.53) and 0.0 (0.0, 0.0), respectively.DiscussionResults support applying the VSW to track overnight sleep measures in free-living settings. Registered atclinicaltrials.gov(NCT05276362).
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory