| Literature DB >> 28974482 |
Cassia Rye Hanton1, Yong-Jun Kwon2, Thawda Aung2, Jackie Whittington1, Robin R High3, Evan H Goulding4, A Katrin Schenk2, Stephen J Bonasera1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cellular mobile telephone technology shows much promise for delivering and evaluating healthcare interventions in cost-effective manners with minimal barriers to access. There is little data demonstrating that these devices can accurately measure clinically important aspects of individual functional status in naturalistic environments outside of the laboratory.Entities:
Keywords: LLFDI; PROMIS Global; PROMIS short; SAFFE; behavioral classification; frailty phenotype; functional status; gait speed; mobile phone; mobility; mobility measures; normal aging; step count
Year: 2017 PMID: 28974482 PMCID: PMC5645644 DOI: 10.2196/mhealth.5090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Figure 1Enrollment flow diagram.
Baseline cohort characteristics (N=40).
| Characteristic | Functionally-intact, n (%) | Frail, n (%) | |||
| Overall | 22 (61%) | 18 (39%) | |||
| .606 | |||||
| Female | 17 (77%) | 12 (67%) | |||
| Male | 5 (23%) | 6 (33%) | |||
| <.001 | |||||
| 50-60 | 1 (5%) | N/A | |||
| 61-70 | 5 (23%) | 1 (6%) | |||
| 71-80 | 14 (63%) | 5 (28%) | |||
| 81-90 | 2 (9%) | 7 (39%) | |||
| 91-100 | N/A | 5 (28%) | |||
| .37 | |||||
| Non-Hispanic white | 20 (91%) | 17 (94%) | |||
| Other | 2 (9%) | 1 (6%) | |||
| Home (rented or owned) | 19 (86%) | 13 (72%) | .26 | ||
| Apartment | 2 (9%) | 4 (22%) | .25 | ||
| Assisted living facility | N/A | 1 (6%) | .33 | ||
| Other | 1 (5%) | N/A | .33 | ||
| Alone | 14 (64%) | 8 (44%) | .17 | ||
| Spouse or significant other | 6 (27%) | 4 (22%) | .80 | ||
| Spouse with children, caregiver | N/A | 4 (22%) | .04 | ||
| Other | 2 (9%) | 2 (11%) | .80 | ||
| <.001 | |||||
| Grades 9-11 | 1 (5%) | 2 (11%) | |||
| Grade 12 or GEDa | 2 (9%) | 5 (28%) | |||
| College 1-3 years | 8 (36%) | 5 (28%) | |||
| College 4 years | 5 (23%) | 4 (22%) | |||
| Graduate school | 6 (27%) | 2 (11%) | |||
| .934 | |||||
| <20 | 1 (5%) | 1 (6%) | |||
| 20-25 | 6 (27%) | 4 (22%) | |||
| 26-30 | 9 (41%) | 5 (28%) | |||
| 31-35 | 5 (23%) | 6 (33%) | |||
| 35+ | 1 (5%) | 2 (11%) | |||
aGED: general education development.
bBMI: body mass index.
Statistical significance of standard questionnaire and physical performance battery in discriminating functionally impaired from functionally intact participants.
| Survey instrument | Intacta | Impaireda | |||
| LLFDIc Overall Function | 64.04 | 46.91 | <.001 | ||
| LLFDI basic lower extremity function | 76.02 | 54.23 | <.001 | ||
| LLFDI advance lower extremity function | 56.15 | 22.41 | <.001 | ||
| LLFDI upper extremity function | 79.57 | 68.95 | .257 | ||
| SAFFEd activity level | 9.32 | 6.38 | <.001 | ||
| SAFFE fear of falling | 0.24 | 0.39 | .052 | ||
| SAFFE activity restriction | 2.45 | 6.59 | <.001 | ||
| PROMISe-PFf | 48.94 | 34.43 | <.001 | ||
| PROMIS-PHg | 51.99 | 40.52 | <.001 | ||
| PROMIS-MHh | 63.65 | 55.79 | .042 | ||
| EuroQol | 0.764 | 0.64 | <.001 | ||
| Timed Get Up and Go (10 ft) | 10.63 | 21.79 | .003 | ||
| 4 Meter Walk | 4.30 | 10.66 | .004 | ||
| Figure-of-8 Walk | 9.19 | 19.28 | .008 | ||
aMean performance.
bP values are 2-sided t test, unequal variance, with Bonferroni correction.
cLLFDI: Late Life Function and Disability Instrument.
dSAFFE: Survey of Activities and Fear of Falling in the Elderly.
ePROMIS: Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System.
fPROMIS-PF: PROMIS Physical Function.
gPROMIS-PH: PROMIS Global Physical Health.
hPROMIS-MH: PROMIS Global Mental Health.
iValues for all performance battery measures are reported in seconds.
Figure 2Mobile phone-derived activity metrics discriminate between frail and functionally-intact individuals. 24-hour time budget for functionallyintact (left) and functionally impaired (right) participants. Time spent in active state (blue slices) is further broken down into periods of low (brown)and high (red, green) physical activity. Percentages (bold) statistically differ between cohorts.
Figure 3Semilog (y axis) of activity duration versus start time of that particular activity bout (x axis) in functionally intact individuals (upper) and functionally impaired individuals (lower). Each point represents a specific activity bout and each color corresponds to a specific participant ("cool" or "warm" colormap).
Figure 4Mean daily gait speed histogram depicting significant differences between functionally intact (blue) and functionally impaired (red) participants. Bootstrap estimates of mean gait speed are provided behind data histograms (light red for functionally impaired; estimate for functionally intact group is completely behind data histogram).
Figure 5Step count versus circadian time for functionally intact (blue) and frail (red) individuals. Bars are plus or minus one standard error of the mean. Time values given in military time.
Figure 6Multiple significant correlations across different functional assessment metrics are present in functionally intact older adults. Confusion matrix depicting correlation structure (metrics across matrix bottom row) of mobile phone-based activity measures (activity count, percent activity, step count, gait speed), questionnaire-based measures of functional status (LLFDI, SAFFE, PROMIS), and performance battery based measures of functional status (Get Up and Go, 4 meter walk, F8W) for functionally intact participants. For each entry, correlation strength is depicted as the color within the box; interpretation color bar provided on the right. Numeric values within each box are individual correlations. Asterisks depict interactions with P values less than .01. Interactions grouped within the red lines depict correlations within mobile phone-derived activity measures; interactions grouped within cyan lines depict correlations within LLFDI measures; interactions grouped within blue lines depict correlations within SAFFE measures; interactions within grouped violet lines depict correlations within PROMIS measures; interactions grouped within green lines depict correlations within performance battery measures.
Figure 7Fewer significant correlations across different functional assessment metrics are present in functionally impaired older adults. Confusion matrix depicting correlation structure of mobile phone-based activity measures, questionnaire-based measures of functional status, and performance battery based measures of functional status for frail participants. Layout similar to Figure 6.