| Literature DB >> 36260403 |
Ciao-Sin Chen1, Judith Kim1, Noemi Garg1, Harsha Guntupalli1, Reshma Jagsi2, Jennifer J Griggs3, Michael Sabel4, Michael P Dorsch1, Brian C Callaghan5, Daniel L Hertz1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Severe chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) can cause long-term dysfunction of the hands and feet, interfere with activities of daily living, and diminish the quality of life. Monitoring to identify CIPN and adjust treatment before it progressing to a life-altering severity relies on patients self-reporting subjective symptoms to their clinical team. Objective assessment is not a standard component of CIPN monitoring due to the requirement for specially trained health care professionals and equipment. Smartphone apps have the potential to conveniently collect both subjective and objective CIPN data directly from patients, which could improve CIPN monitoring.Entities:
Keywords: 9-Hole Peg Test; balance; chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy; gait; mobile health; smartphone
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 36260403 PMCID: PMC8406129 DOI: 10.2196/27502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.947
The structured interview guides.
| Topics | Questions |
| Enrollment and app downloading | 1. What challenges, if any, did you experience in enrolling in the study? |
| Informed consent forms | 2. Did you experience any difficulty in reading and understanding the informed consent forms? |
| Demographics and patient-reported outcome questionnaires | 3. Which study questions, if any, were difficult to answer? Why? |
| Functional assessments | 4. Which functional assessments, if any, were difficult or uncomfortable to perform? Why? |
Clinical data of patients included in the analysis (no variables were significantly different between the 2 groups).
| Demographics | Controls (n=9) | Cases (n=17) | |||||
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 49 (12.4) | 54 (8.2) | .96 | ||||
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| .66 | ||||
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| White | 8 (89) | 14 (82) |
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| Other | 1 (11) | 3 (18) |
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| Height (m), mean (SD) | 1.78 (0.14) | 1.70 (0.10) | .81 | ||||
| Weight (kg), mean (SD) | 83.1 (23.6) | 75.3 (16.6) | .27 | ||||
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| .59a | ||||
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| Breast | 4 (44) | 5 (29) |
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| Ovarian | 0 (0) | 2 (12) |
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| Lung | 0 (0) | 1 (6) |
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| Colorectal | 2 (22) | 6 (35) |
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| Otherb | 4 (44) | 8 (47) |
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| .60 | ||||
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| Taxane | 5 (56) | 6 (35) |
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| Platinum | 2 (22) | 5 (29) |
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| Taxane and platinum | 2 (22) | 6 (35) |
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| Time since treatment completion (months), mean (SD) | 8.27 (16.7) | 2.53 (2.70) | .08 | ||||
aChi-square test between chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy cases and controls that had breast cancer, ovarian cancer, lung cancer, or colorectal cancer versus only other cancer types.
bOther cancer types include liver cancer, esophageal cancer, prostate cancer, cervical cancer, and pancreatic cancer.
Patient-reported CIPN.
| Scale | Controls (n=9) | Cases (n=17) | Feet cases (n=13) | Hands cases (n=9) |
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| CIPN20 | 10.0 (8.8) | 28.1 (17.0) | 29.8 (16.5) | 43.3 (18.6) |
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| CIPN8 (Sensory) | 10.4 (12.1) | 35.4 (21.3) | 37.5 (20.8) | 58.3 (23.0) |
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| CIPNM (Motor) | 8.3 (11.0) | 20.9 (19.4) | 25.0 (19.5) | 33.3 (20.5) |
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| Severity | 2 (0.7) | 3 (0.8) | 3 (0.8) | 3 (0.8) |
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| Interference | 1 (0.3) | 2 (0.8) | 2 (0.8) | 2 (1.0) |
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| Patients reporting a fall, n (%) | 0 (0) | 1 (6) | 1 (8) | 0 (0) |
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aCIPN20: European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire for Chemotherapy-induced Peripheral Neuropathy 20-item scale.
bThere were 2 cases that did not complete CIPN20.
cPRO-CTCAE: Patient-Reported Outcomes version of the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events.
dThere were 3 cases that did not complete PRO-CTCAE.
Figure 1Sample size of each type of data. Excluded acceleration data were from 5 CIPN cases and 2 controls.
Figure 2Step length was calculated by the distance and step count collected by the pedometer. The median step lengths were shorter in CIPN cases than controls (0.54 vs 0.78 m, P=.007).
Figure 3Score plot of PCA integrating mhealthtools gait features and hand features. The first 2 components explained 32.8% of the variance between CIPN cases and controls. However, no individual features showed high importance in the first 2 components (all loadings between -0.2 and 0.2). CIPN: chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy; PCA: principal component analysis.
Figure 4Score plot of partial least squares discriminant analysis integrating mhealthtools gait features and hand features. The first 2 components achieved good separation between CIPN cases and controls and explained 23.0% of the variance between groups. In the first 2 components, 145 features had variable importance in projection scores ≥1, including 12 with scores ≥2 (see Figure 5). All loadings between -0.2 and 0.2. CIPN: chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy; PLS: partial least squares.
Figure 5A total of 12 important features with variable importance in projection scores ≥2 in the first 2 components of partial least squares discriminant analysis. The P values annotated in each subplot were from unpaired two-sample t tests. The x-axis is the swaying axis. CIPN cases had higher Shannon entropy (P=.02), higher median frequency (P=.009), lower maximum frequency (P=.007), lower skewness (P=.004), and lower kurtosis (P=.007) in the swaying axis. CIPN cases also had lower mean (P=.008), median (P=.01), maximum (P=.001), and SD (P<.001) of the distance and lower maximum (P=.02) and SD (P=.02) of the speed of the peg removing movement in the dominant hands, and lower peg removing speed SD (P=.006) in the subordinate hands. CIPN: chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy.