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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR mHealth and uHealth

Date Submitted: Aug 20, 2018
Open Peer Review Period: Aug 24, 2018 - Oct 13, 2018
Date Accepted: Mar 24, 2019
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Wearable-Based Mobile Health App in Gastric Cancer Patients for Postoperative Physical Activity Monitoring: Focus Group Study

Wu JM, Ho TW, Chang YT, Hsu CC, Tsai CJ, Lai F, Lin MT

Wearable-Based Mobile Health App in Gastric Cancer Patients for Postoperative Physical Activity Monitoring: Focus Group Study

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2019;7(4):e11989

DOI: 10.2196/11989

PMID: 31012858

PMCID: 6658307

Wearable-Based Mobile Health Application in Gastric Cancer Patients for Postoperative Physical Activity Monitoring: Pilot Study

  • Jin-Ming Wu; 
  • Te-Wei Ho; 
  • Yao-Ting Chang; 
  • Chung-Chieh Hsu; 
  • Chia-Jui Tsai; 
  • Feipei Lai; 
  • Ming-Tsan Lin

ABSTRACT

Background:

Surgical cancer patients often have deteriorated physical activity (PA), which, in turn, contributes to poor outcomes and early recurrence of cancer. Mobile health (mHealth) platforms are progressively used for monitoring clinical conditions in medical subjects. Despite prevalent enthusiasm for the use of mHealth, limited studies have applied these platforms to surgical patients who are in much need of care because of acutely significant loss of physical function during the postoperative period.

Objective:

The purpose of our study was to determine the feasibility and clinical value of using one wearable device connected with the mHealth platform to record PA among patients with gastric cancer (GC) who had undergone gastrectomy.

Methods:

We enrolled surgical GC patients during their inpatient stay and trained them to use the application and wearable device, enabling them to automatically monitor their walking steps. The patients continued to transmit data until postoperative day 28. The primary aim of this study was to validate the feasibility of this system, which was defined as the proportion of participants using each element of the system (wearing the device and uploading step counts) for at least 70% of the 28-day study. “Definitely feasible,” “possibly feasible,” and “not feasible” were defined as ≥ 70%, 50%–69%, and < 50% of participants meeting the criteria, respectively. Moreover, the secondary aim was to evaluate the clinical value of measuring walking steps by examining whether they were associated with early discharge (length of hospital stay <9 days).

Results:

We enrolled 43 GC inpatients for the analysis. The weekly submission rate at the first, second, third, and fourth week was 100%, 93%, 91%, and 86%, respectively. The overall daily submission rate was 95.5% (1150 days, with 43 subjects submitting data for 28 days). These data showed that this system met the definition of “definitely feasible.” Of the 54 missed transmission days, 6 occurred in week 2, 12 in week 3, and 36 in week 4. The primary reason for not sending data was that patients/caregivers forgot to charge the wearable devices (>90%). Further, we used a multivariable adjusted model to predict early discharge, which demonstrated that every 1000-step increment of walking on postoperative day 5 was associated with early discharge (OR, 2.72; 95% CI: 1.17–6.32, P =.019).

Conclusions:

Incorporating the use of mobile apps with wearable devices to record physical activity in patients of postoperative GC was feasible in patients undergoing gastrectomy in the present study. With the support of the mHealth platform, this app offers seamless tracing of patients' recovery with a little extra burden and turns subjective physical activity into an objective, measurable parameter.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Wu JM, Ho TW, Chang YT, Hsu CC, Tsai CJ, Lai F, Lin MT

Wearable-Based Mobile Health App in Gastric Cancer Patients for Postoperative Physical Activity Monitoring: Focus Group Study

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2019;7(4):e11989

DOI: 10.2196/11989

PMID: 31012858

PMCID: 6658307

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.

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