Application of wearables for remote monitoring of oncology patients: A scoping review

Author:

Cloß Katharina1ORCID,Verket Marlo1,Müller-Wieland Dirk1,Marx Nikolaus1,Schuett Katharina1,Jost Edgar23,Crysandt Martina23,Beier Fabian23,Brümmendorf Tim H23,Kobbe Guido34,Brandts Julia15,Jacobsen Malte1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine I, Medical Faculty, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany

2. Department of Internal Medicine IV, Medical Faculty, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany

3. Center for Integrated Oncology, Aachen Bonn Cologne Düsseldorf (CIO ABCD), Aachen, Germany

4. Department of Hematology, Oncology and Clinical Immunology, University Hospital Düsseldorf, Medical Faculty, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany

5. Imperial Centre for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention (ICCP), Department of Primary Care and Public Health, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London, UK

Abstract

Objective This review aims to systematically map and categorize the current state of wearable applications among oncology patients and to identify determinants impeding clinical implementation. Methods A Medline, Embase and clinicaltrials.gov search identified journal articles, conference abstracts, letters, reports, dissertations and registered studies on the use of wearables in patients with malignancies published up to 10 November 2021. Results Of 2509 records identified, 112 met the eligibility criteria. Of these, 9.8% (11/112) were RCTs and 47.3% (53/112) of publications were observational. Wearables were investigated pre-treatment (2.7%; 3/112), during treatment (34.8%; 39/112), post-treatment (17.9%; 20/112), in survivors (27.7%; 31/112) and in non-specified or multiple treatment phases (17.0%; 19/112). Medical-grade wearables were applied in 22.3% (25/112) of publications. Primary objectives ranged from technical feasibility (8.0%; 9/112), user feasibility (42.9%; 48/112) and correlational analysis (40.2%; 45/112) to outcome change analysis (8.9%; 10/112). Outcome change was mostly investigated regarding physical activity improvement (80.0%; 8/10). Most publications (42.9%; 48/112) and registered studies (39.3%; 24/61) featured multiple cancer types, with breast cancer as the most prevalent specific type (22.3% in publications, 16.4% in registered studies). Conclusions Most studies among oncology patients using wearables are focused on assessing the user feasibility of consumer-grade wearables, whereas rates of RCTs assessing clinical efficacy are low. Substantial improvements in clinically relevant endpoints by the use of wearables, such as morbidity and mortality are yet to be demonstrated.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

internal grant program of the University Hospital Aachen, RWTH Aachen University, Germany

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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