| Literature DB >> 27066075 |
Ciara M Kelly1, Armin Shahrokni2.
Abstract
Progress in cancer research is coupled with increased treatment complexity reliant upon accurate patient selection. Oncologists rely upon measurement instruments of functional performance such as the Karnofsky or Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Performance Status scales that were developed over fifty years ago to determine a patient's suitability for systemic treatment. These standard assessment tools have been shown to correlate with response to chemotherapy, chemotherapy tolerability, survival, and quality of life of cancer patients. However, these scales are subjective, subject to bias and high interobserver variability. Despite these limitations important clinical decisions are based on PS including eligibility for clinical trials, the "optimal" therapeutic approach in routine practice, and the allocation of healthcare resources. This paper reviews the past, present, and potential future of functional performance status assessment in an oncology setting. The potential ability of electronic activity monitoring systems to provide an objective, accurate measurement of patient functional performance is explored. Electronic activity monitoring devices have the potential to offer positive health-related opportunities to patients; however their introduction to the healthcare setting is not without difficulty. The potential role of this technology in healthcare and the challenges that these new innovations pose to the healthcare industry are also examined.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27066075 PMCID: PMC4811104 DOI: 10.1155/2016/6186543
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Alternative measurement instruments of functional performance.
| Assessment tool | Description | Nature of assessment | Feasibility | Limitations | Correlation with outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KPS [ | Linear scale from 0 (dead) to 100 (normally active, without evidence of disease) summarizing ability to perform daily activities, and level of assistance required | Subjective | Time to completion: minutes | Poor reliability, variable levels of interobserver agreement | Survival |
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| ECOG PS [ | 6-point scale ranging from 0 (fully active) to 5 (dead), assessing level of function, ambulation, and capability of self-care | Subjective | Time to completion: minutes | Poor reliability, variable levels of interobserver agreement | Survival |
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| TUG [ | Assessment of mobility and functional balance; functional mobility is quantified by the time it takes a patient to get up from a seated position, walk 3 meters, turn around, and return to a seated position | Objective | Time to completion: seconds | Focused on one domain, mobility | Risk of falling |
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| Frailty Index (FI) [ | FI is the ratio of the deficits present in a person to the total number of potential deficits evaluated | Subjective and objective components | Expensive | Mortality | |
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| SPPB [ | SPPB measures physical and functional health and consists of three subtests: 4-meter walk, repeated chair stands, and standing balance | Objective | Time to completion: 5–10 minutes | Cost | Mortality (data available for older cancer patients and survivors) |
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| EAM [ | Wearable devices that objectively measure physical activity and can provide feedback | Objective | Time to completion: continuous assessment, duration dictated by patient | Cost | Physical intervention, weight reduction |
KPS: Karnofsky Performance Status, ECOG PS: Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group, TUG: Timed Get Up and Go, SPPB: Short Physical Performance Battery, EAM: electronic activity monitoring, and PS: performance status.
Accuracy of objective activity monitoring devices.
| Reference | Population | # | Age (yr) | Device under study | Activity monitored | Method of confirmation | Outcome |
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| [ | Healthy volunteers | 14 | Mean (SD) = 28.1 (6.2) | Pedometer, Digi-Walker SW-200 (Yamax) | Walking | Observer counted steps using tally counter | High accuracy confirmed for all devices |
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| [ | Healthy volunteers | 15 | Range 21–33 | Wearable device, Fitbits (One, Zip, and Flex) | 6 activities for a 5-minute period @ 1.5, 3, and 4 MPH | Video analysis | 90% accuracy for all devices at all speeds |
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| [ | Healthy volunteers | 89 | Mean (SD) = 39 (±13.1) | Lumoback, Fitbit Flex, Jawbone Up, Nike+ FuelBand SE, Misfit Shine, Withings Pulse, Fitbit Zip, Omron | (A) Laboratory setting: walked twice on a treadmill (4.8 km/h) for 30 min | (A) Laboratory setting, Optogait system | Good reliability for step count, |
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| [ | Healthy volunteers | 21 | Fitbit One, Fitbit Zip, Jawbone Up, Misfit Shine, | 48 hr of PA in free living conditions | Research grade accelerometers: BodyMedia SenseWear and ActiGraph GT3X+ | Strong validity between research grade accelerometers and all activity monitors for step count and sleep duration Moderate validity for MVPA and TDEE | |
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| [ | Patients with stroke and traumatic brain injury | 50 | Mean (SD) = 52.9 (±15.1) | Fitbit Ultra and Nike+ FuelBand | Two-minute walk test (2MWT) | Video analysis | In order of decreasing accuracy, |
yr: year, MPH: miles per hour, hr: hour, PA: physical activity, MVPA: moderate to vigorous physical activity, and TDEE: total daily energy expenditure.
Clinical studies incorporating EAM systems in cancer populations.
| Reference | Sample, | Device | Study design | Study objective | Results relevant to EAM measured PA data |
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| Descriptive and feasibility studies | |||||
| [ | Breast cancer survivor | ActiGraph Accelerometer: | Case control study | Compare level of PA and sedentary behavior between survivors and controls | Breast cancer survivors are more sedentary than noncancer controls |
| [ | Cancer survivor, | ActiGraph AM-7164 | Case control study | Compare PA levels among cancer survivors and controls | Neither group met the CDC guidelines for physical activity, |
| [ | Lung and upper gastrointestinal cancer patients (ECOG PS 0–2) | ActivPAL | Prospective, observational study | Assessment of patient acceptability using compliance based on analysis of movement data | EAM device fulfilled the definition of acceptability; 98% wore the EAM ≥80% of the time |
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| Reliability/accuracy of EAM devices | |||||
| [ | Hematologic malignancy | Step Accelerometer 3 (SAM3) | Prospective, case control study | Compare reliability of the assessment of PA and compare PA levels between patients and controls | Device, good reliability |
| [ | Advanced cancer patients (KPS 40–100), | ActivPAL | Prospective, observational study | EAM measured PA data was validated against video-recorded observations and EE measured by DLW protocol | Step count error higher in patients with KPS 40–60% versus KPS 70–100% (33 versus 24%, |
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| Correlative studies | |||||
| [ | Breast cancer patients, | ActiGraph Model GT3X | Prospective, case control study | Examine the effect of PA level on working memory | Greater PA level was positively and significantly associated with better working memory performance across both arms ( |
| [ | Colon cancer survivors | ActiGraph Model GT3X | Cross-sectional, observational study | Determine the association of EAM measured MVPA with QoL and physical functioning | MVPA was significantly associated with better QoL ( |
| [ | Incurable thoracic cancer patients (ECOG PS 0–2) | ActivPAL | Retrospective study | Determine the correlation between EAM measured PA and ECOG PS | Decline in ECOG PS was significantly associated with decline in EAM measured step count ( |
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| Interventional studies | |||||
| [ | Breast cancer survivors (stages I–IIIA) | Pedometer | RCT | Determine the effects of breast cancer-specific PA print materials, pedometer, or their combination, on self-reported PA and QoL in breast cancer survivors | Significant intervention effect on self-reported physical activity and walking but no intervention effect on daily steps. Effect seen in all interventional arms. Combination arm, significantly improved QoL ( |
| [ | Breast and prostate cancer patients receiving radiation therapy | Pedometer, details not reported | RCT | Examine the feasibility and initial efficacy of a home-based aerobic and progressive resistance exercise intervention for aerobic capacity, strength, muscle mass, CRF, and QoL | Significantly greater increase in daily steps, higher QoL, and lower CRF in intervention group after intervention and at 3-month follow-up. |
EE: energy expenditure, DLW: doubly labeled water, EAM: electronic activity monitor, MVPA: moderate to vigorous intensity physical activity, QoL: quality of life, PA: physical activity, RCT: randomized controlled trial, and CRF: cancer-related fatigue.