| Literature DB >> 32366013 |
Marcelo Aguilar-Rivera1, Dieanira T Erudaitius1, Vincent M Wu1, Justin C Tantiongloc2, Dae Y Kang1, Todd P Coleman1,3, Sally L Baxter3,4, Robert N Weinreb1,3.
Abstract
Glaucoma, the leading cause of irreversible blindness, affects >70 million people worldwide. Lowering intraocular pressure via topical administration of eye drops is the most common first-line therapy for glaucoma. This treatment paradigm has notoriously high non-adherence rates: ranging from 30% to 80%. The advent of smart phone enabled technologies creates promise for improving eyedrop adherence. However, previous eyedrop electronic monitoring solutions had awkward medication bottle adjuncts and crude software for monitoring the administration of a drop that adversely affected their ability to foster sustainable improvements in adherence. The current work begins to address this unmet need for wireless technology by creating a "smart drop" bottle. This medication bottle is instrumented with sensing electronics that enable detection of each eyedrop administered while maintaining the shape and size of the bottle. This is achieved by a thin electronic force sensor wrapped around the bottle and underneath the label, interfaced with a thin electronic circuit underneath the bottle that allows for detection and wireless transmission to a smart-phone application. We demonstrate 100% success rate of wireless communication over 75 feet with <1% false positive and false negative rates of single drop deliveries, thus providing a viable solution for eyedrop monitoring for glaucoma patients.Entities:
Keywords: Glaucoma; adherence; alerts; clinical decision support; internet of things; monitoring; sensors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32366013 PMCID: PMC7248824 DOI: 10.3390/s20092570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1(A1) Lateral view of electronics underlying the smart drop system, comprising a thin conductive pressure-sensitive electronic sensor, for bottle squeezing detection and an electronic circuit (<2 mm thick) for signal processing and wireless transmission. (A2) Top view of electronic sensor and electronics placed beneath the bottle. The circuit diameter and battery are approximately 14 mm in diameter. (B1) An eyedrop bottle containing the flexible sensor underneath the label, and electronics at the base of the bottle. (B2) Plastic case (height 3.5 mm) underneath an eyedrop bottle that covers the battery and the circular electronic circuit. (C) Smart phone application that communicates via Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) with the instrumented eyedrop bottle to track eyedrop adherence. The application can update patient adherence information to a database (Google) where individuals (e.g., physicians, care providers, family members) can track how the patient adheres. The database also allows for real-time updating of reminder specifications on the smart phone app, so that programed reminders for patients can be modified remotely.
Figure 2Scheme depicting normal behavior of the eyedrop bottle system. When upside-down bottle is squeezed, the system broadcast such the time stamp information of when the bottle was squeezed.
Figure 3Each bottle squeeze consumes ~12 μA for 3 ms. Intact bottles can achieve >1000 pushes and BLE transmissions while battery voltage is over 1.8 V, the minimum input voltage for the Cypress programmable system on a chip (PSOC).
Figure 4(A) Each bottle was squeezed six times per day. The average number of days a bottle operates with a functional battery 21.3 days. (B) A straight distance test for Bluetooth connectivity between the bottle and a tablet; bottle connection rates for 75 ft and below are 100%. (C) A test of connectivity with door or wall between the bottle and tablet application; distance of successful medication delivery event registration was 36 ± 4.7 ft.
Figure 5False negative test with two consecutive squeezes. For 2 and 3 s between squeezes, the false negative rate is at 0%.