Literature DB >> 32310138

Feasibility of In-Home Sensor Monitoring to Detect Mild Cognitive Impairment in Aging Military Veterans: Prospective Observational Study.

Adriana Seelye1,2,3,4, Mira Isabelle Leese1, Katherine Dorociak1, Nicole Bouranis3,4, Nora Mattek3,4, Nicole Sharma3,4, Zachary Beattie3,4, Thomas Riley3,4, Jonathan Lee2,4, Kevin Cosgrove3,4, Nicole Fleming3,4, Jessica Klinger1,2, John Ferguson1,5, Greg John Lamberty1,2, Jeffrey Kaye3,4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Aging military veterans are an important and growing population who are at an elevated risk for developing mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer dementia, which emerge insidiously and progress gradually. Traditional clinic-based assessments are administered infrequently, making these visits less ideal to capture the earliest signals of cognitive and daily functioning decline in older adults.
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of a novel ecologically valid assessment approach that integrates passive in-home and mobile technologies to assess instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) that are not well captured by clinic-based assessment methods in an aging military veteran sample.
METHODS: Participants included 30 community-dwelling military veterans, classified as healthy controls (mean age 72.8, SD 4.9 years; n=15) or MCI (mean age 74.3, SD 6.0 years; n=15) using the Clinical Dementia Rating Scale. Participants were in relatively good health (mean modified Cumulative Illness Rating Scale score 23.1, SD 2.9) without evidence of depression (mean Geriatrics Depression Scale score 1.3, SD 1.6) or anxiety (mean generalized anxiety disorder questionnaire 1.3, SD 1.3) on self-report measures. Participants were clinically assessed at baseline and 12 months later with health and daily function questionnaires and neuropsychological testing. Daily computer use, medication taking, and physical activity and sleep data were collected via passive computer monitoring software, an instrumented pillbox, and a fitness tracker watch in participants' environments for 12 months between clinical study visits.
RESULTS: Enrollment began in October 2018 and continued until the study groups were filled in January 2019. A total of 201 people called to participate following public posting and focused mailings. Most common exclusionary criteria included nonveteran status 11.4% (23/201), living too far from the study site 9.4% (19/201), and having exclusionary health concerns 17.9% (36/201). Five people have withdrawn from the study: 2 with unanticipated health conditions, 2 living in a vacation home for more than half of the year, and 1 who saw no direct benefit from the research study. At baseline, MCI participants had lower Montreal Cognitive Assessment (P<.001) and higher Functional Activities Questionnaire (P=.04) scores than healthy controls. Over seven months, research personnel visited participants' homes a total of 73 times for technology maintenance. Technology maintenance visits were more prevalent for MCI participants (P=.04) than healthy controls.
CONCLUSIONS: Installation and longitudinal deployment of a passive in-home IADL monitoring platform with an older adult military veteran sample was feasible. Knowledge gained from this pilot study will be used to help develop acceptable and effective home-based assessment tools that can be used to passively monitor cognition and daily functioning in older adult samples. ©Adriana Seelye, Mira Isabelle Leese, Katherine Dorociak, Nicole Bouranis, Nora Mattek, Nicole Sharma, Zachary Beattie, Thomas Riley, Jonathan Lee, Kevin Cosgrove, Nicole Fleming, Jessica Klinger, John Ferguson, Greg John Lamberty, Jeffrey Kaye. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (http://formative.jmir.org), 08.06.2020.

Entities:  

Keywords:  activities of daily living; aging; mild cognitive impairment; technology

Year:  2020        PMID: 32310138     DOI: 10.2196/16371

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JMIR Form Res        ISSN: 2561-326X


  8 in total

1.  Executive functioning predicts discrepancies between objective and self-reported physical activity in older adults: a pilot study.

Authors:  John Pk Bernstein; Madeline Dw Noland; Katherine E Dorociak; Mira I Leese; Samuel Y Lee; Adriana Hughes
Journal:  Neuropsychol Dev Cogn B Aging Neuropsychol Cogn       Date:  2021-09-23

2.  Use of in-home activity monitoring technologies in older adult veterans with mild cognitive impairment: The impact of attitudes and cognition.

Authors:  Mira I Leese; Katherine E Dorociak; Madeline Noland; Joseph E Gaugler; Nora Mattek; Adriana Hughes
Journal:  Gerontechnology       Date:  2021-06

3.  The Survey for Memory, Attention, and Reaction Time (SMART): Development and Validation of a Brief Web-Based Measure of Cognition for Older Adults.

Authors:  Katherine E Dorociak; Nora Mattek; Jonathan Lee; Mira I Leese; Nicole Bouranis; Danish Imtiaz; Bridget M Doane; John P K Bernstein; Jeffrey A Kaye; Adriana M Hughes
Journal:  Gerontology       Date:  2021-04-07       Impact factor: 5.140

4.  Passively-Measured Routine Home Computer Activity and Application Use Can Detect Mild Cognitive Impairment and Correlate with Important Cognitive Functions in Older Adulthood.

Authors:  John P K Bernstein; Katherine E Dorociak; Nora Mattek; Mira Leese; Zachary T Beattie; Jeffrey A Kaye; Adriana Hughes
Journal:  J Alzheimers Dis       Date:  2021       Impact factor: 4.472

5.  Unobtrusive, in-home assessment of older adults' everyday activities and health events: associations with cognitive performance over a brief observation period.

Authors:  John P K Bernstein; Katherine Dorociak; Nora Mattek; Mira Leese; Chelsea Trapp; Zachary Beattie; Jeffrey Kaye; Adriana Hughes
Journal:  Neuropsychol Dev Cogn B Aging Neuropsychol Cogn       Date:  2021-04-18

6.  The Collaborative Aging Research Using Technology Initiative: An Open, Sharable, Technology-Agnostic Platform for the Research Community.

Authors:  Zachary Beattie; Lyndsey M Miller; Carlos Almirola; Wan-Tai M Au-Yeung; Hannah Bernard; Kevin E Cosgrove; Hiroko H Dodge; Charlene J Gamboa; Ona Golonka; Sarah Gothard; Sam Harbison; Stephanie Irish; Judith Kornfeld; Jonathan Lee; Jennifer Marcoe; Nora C Mattek; Charlie Quinn; Christina Reynolds; Thomas Riley; Nathaniel Rodrigues; Nicole Sharma; Mary Alice Siqueland; Neil W Thomas; Timothy Truty; Rachel Wall; Katherine Wild; Chao-Yi Wu; Jason Karlawish; Nina B Silverberg; Lisa L Barnes; Sara Czaja; Lisa C Silbert; Jeffrey Kaye
Journal:  Digit Biomark       Date:  2020-11-26

7.  Eigenbehaviour as an Indicator of Cognitive Abilities.

Authors:  Angela A Botros; Narayan Schuetz; Christina Röcke; Robert Weibel; Mike Martin; René M Müri; Tobias Nef
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2022-04-04       Impact factor: 3.576

8.  Domain Experts on Dementia-Care Technologies: Mitigating Risk in Design and Implementation.

Authors:  Clara Berridge; George Demiris; Jeffrey Kaye
Journal:  Sci Eng Ethics       Date:  2021-02-18       Impact factor: 3.525

  8 in total

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