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Objective Activity Parameters Track Patient-specific Physical Recovery Trajectories After Surgery and Link With Individual Preoperative Immune States

Authors :
Maria Xenochristou
Alan L. Chang
Davide De Francesco
Brice Gaudilliere
Pervez Sultan
Derek F. Amanatullah
Martha Tingle
Edward A. Ganio
Anthony Culos
Ramin Fallahzadeh
Nima Aghaeepour
Martin Becker
Natalie Stanley
Stuart B. Goodman
Camilo Espinosa
Amy S. Tsai
James I. Huddleston
Martin S. Angst
Thanaphong Phongpreecha
Xiaoxiao Gao
Franck Verdonk
Ivana Maric
Source :
Annals of Surgery. 277:e503-e512
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2021.

Abstract

The longitudinal assessment of physical function with high temporal resolution at a scalable and objective level in patients recovering from surgery is highly desirable to understand the biological and clinical factors that drive the clinical outcome. However, physical recovery from surgery itself remains poorly defined and the utility of wearable technologies to study recovery after surgery has not been established.Prolonged postoperative recovery is often associated with long-lasting impairment of physical, mental, and social functions. While phenotypical and clinical patient characteristics account for some variation of individual recovery trajectories, biological differences likely play a major role. Specifically, patient-specific immune states have been linked to prolonged physical impairment after surgery. However, current methods of quantifying physical recovery lack patient specificity and objectivity.Here, a combined high-fidelity accelerometry and state-of-the-art deep immune profiling approach was studied in patients undergoing major joint replacement surgery. The aim was to determine whether objective physical parameters derived from accelerometry data can accurately track patient-specific physical recovery profiles (suggestive of a 'clock of postoperative recovery'), compare the performance of derived parameters with benchmark metrics including step count, and link individual recovery profiles with patients' preoperative immune state.The results of our models indicate that patient-specific temporal patterns of physical function can be derived with a precision superior to benchmark metrics. Notably, six distinct domains of physical function and sleep are identified to represent the objective temporal patterns: "activity capacity" and "moderate and overall activity" (declined immediately after surgery); "sleep disruption and sedentary activity" (increased after surgery); "overall sleep", "sleep onset", and "light activity" (no clear changes were observed after surgery). These patterns can be linked to individual patients' preoperative immune state using cross-validated canonical-correlation analysis. Importantly, the pSTAT3 signal activity in M-MDSCs predicted a slower recovery.Accelerometry-based recovery trajectories are scalable and objective outcomes to study patient-specific factors that drive physical recovery.

Details

ISSN :
00034932
Volume :
277
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....175f611e2ce882f37eb82e773bfdfb53
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/sla.0000000000005250