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WEARCON: wearable home monitoring in children with asthma reveals a strong association with hospital based assessment of asthma control

Mattiènne van der Kamp, Emilie Klaver, Boony Thio, J.M.M. Driessen, Frans H. de Jongh, Monique Tabak, Job van der Palen, HJ Hermens

2020BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Asthma is one of the most common chronic diseases in childhood. Regular follow-up of physiological parameters in the home setting, in relation to asthma symptoms, can provide complementary quantitative insights into the dynamics of the asthma status. Despite considerable interest in asthma home-monitoring in children, there is a paucity of scientific evidence, especially on multi-parameter monitoring approaches. Therefore, the aim of this study is to investigate whether asthma control can be accurately assessed in the home situation by combining parameters from respiratory physiology sensors. METHODS: Sixty asthmatic and thirty non-asthmatic children were enrolled in the observational WEARCON-study. Asthma control was assessed according to GINA guidelines by the paediatrician. All children were also evaluated during a 2-week home-monitoring period with wearable devices; a physical activity tracker, a handheld spirometer, smart inhalers, and an ambulatory electrocardiography device to monitor heart and respiratory rate. Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to determine which diagnostic measures were associated with asthma control. RESULTS: 24 of the 27 uncontrolled asthmatic children and 29 of the 32 controlled asthmatic children could be accurately identified with this model. The final model showed that a larger variation in pre-exercise lung function (OR = 1.34 95%-CI 1.07-1.68), an earlier wake-up-time (OR = 1.05 95%-CI 1.01-1.10), more reliever use (OR = 1.11 95%-CI 1.03-1.19) and a longer respiratory rate recovery time (OR = 1.12 95%-CI 1.05-1.20) were significant contributors to the probability of having uncontrolled asthma. CONCLUSIONS: Home-monitoring of physiological parameters correlates with paediatrician assessed asthma control. The constructed multivariate model identifies 88.9% of all uncontrolled asthmatic children, indicating a high potential for monitoring of asthma control. This may allow healthcare professionals to assess asthma control at home. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Netherlands Trail Register, NL6087 . Registered 14 February 2017.

Topics & Concepts

AsthmaMedicineSpirometerLogistic regressionObservational studyAmbulatoryPediatricsPhysical therapyEmergency medicineSpirometryInternal medicineExhaled nitric oxideAsthma and respiratory diseasesDelphi Technique in ResearchMobile Health and mHealth Applications
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