1. Consumer-based activity trackers in evaluation of physical activity in myositis patients
- Author
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Chester V. Oddis, Rohit Aggarwal, Diane Koontz, Nicole Neiman, Siamak Moghadam-Kia, Didem Saygin, and Bonny Rockette-Wagner
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Activities of daily living ,Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Fitness Trackers ,Polymyositis ,Manual Muscle Testing ,Rheumatology ,Activities of Daily Living ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Exercise ,Myositis ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Muscle weakness ,Dermatomyositis ,medicine.disease ,Cohort ,Physical therapy ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Cadence ,business - Abstract
Objectives Inflammatory myopathies are characterized by muscle weakness that limits the activities of daily living. Daily step count is an accepted metric of physical activity. Wearable technologies such as Fitbit® enable tracking of daily step counts. We assessed the psychometric properties of Fitbit® and compared the accuracy of Fitbit® step counts to ActiGraph®. Methods This was a pilot, proof of concept, prospective observational study with four visits at 0, 1, 3 and 6 months in PM, DM, necrotizing myopathy (NM) or anti-synthetase syndrome (AS) subjects. Six core set measures (manual muscle testing, physician global disease activity, patient global disease activity, and extra-muscular disease activity, HAQ-Disability Index and creatine kinase), three functional tests (six-min walk, timed up-and-go, sit-to-stand tests) and SF-36 physical function-10 (PF10) were collected at each visit. Patients wore waist-worn Fitbit® One and ActiGraph® T3X-BT concurrently for 7 days/month for 6 months. Results Twenty-four (10 DM, 8 PM/NM, 6 AS) patients (17 females/7 males; 91% Caucasian) were enrolled. Test-retest reliability of daily steps was strong in 1-month follow-up (ICC 0.89). Daily steps and peak 1-min cadence showed moderate-strong correlations with physician global disease activity, patient global disease activity, HAQ-Disability Index, SF-36 PF10 and all three functional tests. Fitbit® and ActiGraph® step counts demonstrated good agreement and strong correlation (ICC 0.96). Conclusion Fitbit® daily steps and peak 1-min cadence are reliable and valid measures of physical activity in a cohort of myositis patients. This pilot data suggests that Fitbit® has a potential for use in clinical practice and trials to monitor physical activity in myositis patients, but larger studies are needed for further validation.
- Published
- 2021
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