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Digital Health Technology to Measure Drug Efficacy in Clinical Trials for Parkinson’s Disease: A Regulatory Perspective

Leonard Sacks, Elizabeth Kunkoski

2021Journal of Parkinson s Disease29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Digital health technology (DHT), including wearable and environmental sensors, video cameras and other electronic tools, has provided new opportunities for the measurement of movement and functionality in Parkinson's disease. Compared to current standards for evaluation of the disease (MDS-UPDRS), DHT may offer new possibilities for more frequent objective measurements of the duration, severity and frequency of disease manifestations over time, that may provide more information than periodic clinic visits. However, DHT measurements are only scientifically and medically useful if they are accurate, reliable and clinically meaningful. Verification and validation, also known as analytical validation and clinical validation, of DHT performance is important to ensure the accuracy and precision of measurements, and the specificity of findings. Given the wide range of clinical manifestations associated with Parkinson's disease and the many tools and metrics to assess them, the challenge is to identify those that may represent a standard for use in clinical trials, and to confirm when digital measurements succeed or fall short of capturing meaningful benefits during drug development.

Topics & Concepts

Clinical trialPerspective (graphical)DiseaseParkinson's diseaseWearable computerDrug trialMedicineDigital healthComputer scienceWearable technologyPhysical medicine and rehabilitationMedical physicsClinical diseasePhysical therapyArtificial intelligencePathologyHealth careEmbedded systemEconomic growthEconomicsParkinson's Disease Mechanisms and TreatmentsNeurological disorders and treatmentsCardiac pacing and defibrillation studies
Digital Health Technology to Measure Drug Efficacy in Clinical Trials for Parkinson’s Disease: A Regulatory Perspective | Litcius