| Literature DB >> 36119968 |
Salima Brillman1, Kalea Colletta2, Sally Borucki3, Peter T Lin4, Olga Waln5, Melita Petrossian6, Pravin Khemani7, Apoorva Rajagopal8, Kathryn H Rosenbluth8, Dhira Khosla8.
Abstract
Background: Transcutaneous afferent patterned stimulation (TAPS) is a prescription, wrist-worn device-delivered, non-invasive neuromodulation therapy for treatment of hand tremor in patients with essential tremor (ET). This retrospective post-market surveillance study evaluated real-world effectiveness of TAPS from patients using therapy on-demand for at least 90 days between August 2019 through June 2021.Entities:
Keywords: essential tremor; peripheral neuromodulation; real-world evidence; remote sensing; transcutaneous afferent patterned stimulation
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36119968 PMCID: PMC9442494 DOI: 10.5334/tohm.715
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y) ISSN: 2160-8288
Figure 1TAPS device and data. (A) The prescription wrist-worn TAPS device was shipped directly to patients and was comprised of a stimulator, band containing TAPS-delivering electrodes, and cloud-connected base station that charged the device and streamed device logs to a centralized database. A user guide included with the device contained instructions for patients on setup, calibration, and usage of TAPS therapy. (B) Study data were derived from the healthcare provider-completed prescription form, device logs automatically generated during therapy home use, and a voluntary survey sent to patients after 90 days of therapy use. (C) For the first 40 sessions and every 7th session thereafter, the device prompted patients to perform a twenty-second postural hold before and after stimulation and prompted patients to self-rate their tremor improvement after stimulation. Tremor power, computed from postural hold accelerometry data of clean signal quality, was used to characterize tremor severity. Additionally, measurements were classified into patient-specific bands of High, Medium, and Low based on pre-stimulation tremor power.
Patient voluntary survey.
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| SURVEY QUESTION |
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| For how many years have you had hand tremor symptoms? |
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| How would you rate the overall tremor severity of your treated hand without using Cala Trio? |
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| How many tremor medications have you tried prior to starting Cala Trio? |
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| How many tremor medications are you currently taking for your hand tremor? |
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| Have you changed your tremor medication dosage since starting Cala Trio? |
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| If Cala Trio were presented as an option at the same time as medications or surgical procedures, which would you choose? (1 = would choose first) |
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| Which activities would you most like Cala Trio therapy to help you with? (1 = Most important to you) |
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| Please rate the impact the Cala Trio has on the following activities. |
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Study population.
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| POPULATION CHARACTERISTICS* | |
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| 71 ± 10 |
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| 32% |
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| Neurologists (movement disorder specialists) | 26% |
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| Neurologists (general, and other sub-specialists) | 45% |
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| Family practice, internal medicine | 14% |
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| Occupational or physical therapist | 3% |
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| Other (incl. unknown) | 12% |
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| <5 years | 13% |
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| 5–10 years | 25% |
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| 10–20 years | 30% |
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| >20 years | 32% |
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| Mild | 4% |
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| Moderate | 62% |
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| Marked | 25% |
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| Severe | 9% |
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| None | 12% |
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| 1 | 22% |
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| 2 | 25% |
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| 3 | 19% |
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| >4 | 23% |
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| None | 38% |
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| 1 | 41% |
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| 2 | 17% |
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| 3 | 4% |
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| >4 | 0% |
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| Activities of daily living | 78% |
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| Social activities | 6% |
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| Hobbies | 7% |
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| Professional responsibilities | 9% |
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| Housework | 0% |
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* From N = 321 (full study population) prescription forms.
+ From N = 121 of the 321 for whom gender data was available.
** From N = 69 survey respondents.
Descriptive Statistics of Usage and Effectiveness.
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| ALL PATIENTS | AGE <65 | AGE ≥ 65 | |
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| Sessions per week | 5.4 (4.5) | 4.8 (5.8) | 5.5 (4.2) |
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| Days per week with at least one session | 3.2 (1.9) | 2.6 (2.0) | 3.4 (1.9) |
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| Sessions per day on days when therapy used | 1.5 (0.6) | 1.5 (0.7) | 1.5 (0.6) |
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| Improvement ratio, all sessions | 3.5 (×4.1) | 4.4 (×3.2) | 3.3 (×4.3) |
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| Improvement ratio, “High” tremor sessions | 9.1 (×6.2) | 15.9 (×7.2) | 8.1 (×5.9) |
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| Improvement ratio, “Medium” tremor sessions | 3.7 (×4.6) | 4.6 (×3.4) | 3.5 (×4.9) |
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| Improvement ratio, “Low” tremor sessions | 1.3 (×3.3) | 1.2 (×2.2) | 1.4 (×3.6) |
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| % Sessions rated “Improved” | 59% | 69% | 57% |
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| % Sessions rated “No Change” | 38% | 29% | 40% |
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| % Sessions rated “Worsened” | 3% | 2% | 3% |
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* Geometric mean and SD are analogous to arithmetic mean and SD of log-transformed data; and geometric SD represents ×/÷ factor change from geometric mean.
Figure 2Effectiveness assessed through longitudinal home-use data. (A) TAPS effectiveness was summarized across all, and High/Medium/Low session groups. Error bars represent geometric mean ×/÷ 1 geometric standard error (equivalent in range to mean ± 1 standard error of log-transformed data). (B) Across all sessions, cumulative distribution of per-patient tremor reductions indicated clinically meaningful improvement for most patients. (C) Patient self-ratings of post-TAPS improvement were similar in distribution to motion-sensor ratings of post-TAPS improvement. (D) Frequency of post-stimulation tremor severity categories were broken down for each pre-stimulation severity group. TAPS improved tremor severity category for most sessions that started High or Medium, and maintained Low tremor for sessions that started Low.
Figure 3Patient-reported outcomes. (A) Respondents rated effect of TAPS on various activities of daily living, with 84% of respondents indicating improvement in at least one of eating, drinking, or writing, and 65% of respondents indicating improvements in overall quality of life. (B) Survey respondents generally preferred TAPS over medication or surgical management of tremor.