研究多种长期疾病(MLTC-M/多重疾病)患者多种日常症状随时间的变异性:一项纵向智能手表可行性研究的探索性分析。

Khalid Kazi, Syed Mustafa Ali, David A Selby, John McBeth, Sabine van der Veer, William G Dixon
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摘要

患有多种长期疾病(MLTC-M)的人会经历一系列相互关联的症状。这些症状可以使用智能手机和可穿戴设备等消费技术进行纵向追踪,然后进行总结,以提供有用的临床见解。目的:我们旨在进行探索性分析,总结通过智能手表跟踪的多种症状评分的范围和轨迹,并在可行性研究中调查MLTC-M患者这些症状评分与人口统计学因素之间的关系。方法:“注意你的脚步”是一项前瞻性观察性可行性研究,在90天的时间内每天管理多个问题。患有不止一种临床诊断的长期疾病的成年人每天评估7个核心症状,加上每天多达8个针对其LTCs个性化的额外症状。在个体和群体水平上总结研究期间的症状评分。还绘制了症状评分来描述个人的日常症状轨迹。结果:52名参与者提交了症状评分。其中一半是男性,大多数LTCs影响三个或更多疾病区域(N = 33, 64%)。最严重的症状是疲劳。合并症增加的患者或女性似乎与较差的疲劳体验有关。疲劳程度与疼痛和功能障碍程度密切相关。结论:在这项研究中,我们已经证明,收集和描述性分析MLTC-M患者自我报告的症状数据是可能的,每天在智能手表上收集多次,以获得可能支持未来临床护理和研究的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Examining the variability of multiple daily symptoms over time among individuals with multiple long-term conditions (MLTC-M/multimorbidity): An exploratory analysis of a longitudinal smartwatch feasibility study.

Introduction: People living with multiple long-term conditions (MLTC-M) (multimorbidity) experience a range of inter-related symptoms. These symptoms can be tracked longitudinally using consumer technology, such as smartphones and wearable devices, and then summarised to provide useful clinical insight.

Aim: We aimed to perform an exploratory analysis to summarise the extent and trajectory of multiple symptom ratings tracked via a smartwatch, and to investigate the relationship between these symptom ratings and demographic factors in people living with MLTC-M in a feasibility study.

Methods: 'Watch Your Steps' was a prospective observational feasibility study, administering multiple questions per day over a 90 day period. Adults with more than one clinician-diagnosed long-term condition rated seven core symptoms each day, plus up to eight additional symptoms personalised to their LTCs per day. Symptom ratings were summarised over the study period at the individual and group level. Symptom ratings were also plotted to describe day-to-day symptom trajectories for individuals.

Results: Fifty two participants submitted symptom ratings. Half were male and the majority had LTCs affecting three or more disease areas (N = 33, 64%). The symptom rated as most problematic was fatigue. Patients with increased comorbidity or female sex seemed to be associated with worse experiences of fatigue. Fatigue ratings were strongly correlated with pain and level of dysfunction.

Conclusion: In this study we have shown that it is possible to collect and descriptively analyse self reported symptom data in people living with MLTC-M, collected multiple times per day on a smartwatch, to gain insights that might support future clinical care and research.

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