Physiological Data Collected from Wearable Devices Identify and Predict Inflammatory Bowel Disease Flares, 2025, Robert P. Hirten et al

Discussion in 'Other health news and research' started by Mij, Jan 16, 2025 at 3:40 PM.

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  1. Mij

    Mij Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Abstract:
    Background and Aims
    Wearable devices capture physiological signals non-invasively and passively. Many of these parameters have been linked to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) activity. We evaluated the associative ability of several physiological metrics with IBD flares and how they change before the development of flare.
    Methods
    Participants throughout the United States answered daily disease activity surveys and wore an Apple Watch, Fitbit or Oura Ring. These devices collected longitudinal heart rate (HR), resting heart rate (RHR), heart rate variability (HRV), steps, and oxygenation (SpO2). C-reactive protein, erythrocyte sedimentation rate and fecal calprotectin were collected as standard of care. Linear mixed-effect models were implemented to analyze HR, RHR, steps, and SpO2, while cosinor mixed-effect models were applied to HRV circadian features. Mixed effect logistic regression was used to determine the predictive ability of physiological metrics.
    Results
    309 participants were enrolled across 36 states. Circadian patterns of HRV significantly differed between periods of inflammatory flare and remission, and symptomatic flare and remission. Marginal means for HR and RHR were higher during periods of inflammatory flare and symptomatic flare. There was lower daily steps during inflammatory flares. HRV, HR, and RHR differentiated whether participants with symptoms had inflammation. HRV, HR, RHR, steps, and SpO2 were significantly altered up to 7 weeks prior to inflammatory and symptomatic flares.
    Conclusions
    Longitudinally collected physiological metrics from wearable devices can identify and change prior to IBD flares, suggesting their feasibility to monitor and predict IBD activity.
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