Wearables Detect Malaria Early in a Controlled Human-Infection Study

被引:8
作者
Chaudhury, Sidhartha [1 ,2 ]
Yu, Chenggang [2 ,3 ]
Liu, Ruifeng [2 ,3 ]
Kumar, Kamal [2 ,3 ]
Hornby, Samantha [2 ,3 ]
Duplessis, Christopher [4 ]
Sklar, Joel M. [4 ]
Epstein, Judith E. [4 ]
Reifman, Jaques [2 ]
机构
[1] Walter Reed Army Inst Res, Ctr Enabling Capabil, Silver Spring, MD USA
[2] US Army Med Res & Dev Command, Dept Def Biotechnol High Performance Comp Softwar, Telemed & Adv Technol Res Ctr, Ft Detrick, MD 21702 USA
[3] Henry M Jackson Fdn Adv Mil Med Inc, Bethesda, MD USA
[4] Naval Med Res Ctr, Malaria Dept, San Diego, CA USA
关键词
Diseases; Wearable computers; Monitoring; Temperature sensors; Temperature measurement; Telemedicine; Software; Detection; infection; malaria; physiological monitoring; wearable device; MOSQUITOS;
D O I
10.1109/TBME.2021.3137756
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号
0831 ;
摘要
Objective: Observational studies on the use of commercially available wearable devices for infection detection lack the rigor of controlled clinical studies, where time of exposure and onset of infection are exactly known. Towards that end, we carried out a feasibility study using a commercial smartwatch for monitoring heart rate, skin temperature, and body acceleration on subjects as they underwent a controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) challenge. Methods: Ten subjects underwent CHMI and were asked to wear the smartwatch for at least 12 hours/day from 2 weeks pre-challenge to 4 weeks post-challenge. Using these data, we developed 2B-Healthy, a Bayesian-based infection-prediction algorithm that estimates a probability of infection. We also collected data from eight control subjects for 4 weeks to assess the false-positive rate of 2B-Healthy. Results: Nine of 10 CHMI subjects developed parasitemia, with an average time to parasitemia of 12 days. 2B-Healthy detected infection in seven of nine subjects (78% sensitivity), where in six subjects it detected infection 6 days before parasitemia (on average). In the eight control subjects, we obtained a false-positive rate of 6%/week. Conclusion: The 2B-Healthy algorithm was able to reliably detect infection prior to the onset of symptoms using data collected from a commercial smartwatch in a controlled human infection study. Significance: Our findings demonstrate the feasibility of wearables as a screening tool to provide early warning of infection and support further research on the use of the 2B-Healthy algorithm as the basis for a wearable infection-detection platform.
引用
收藏
页码:2119 / 2129
页数:11
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