Abstract

Understanding day-to-day variations in symptoms and medication management can be important in describing patient centered outcomes for people with constipation. Patient Generated Health Data (PGHD) from digital devices is a potential solution, but its utility as a tool for describing experiences of people with frequent constipation is unknown. We conducted a virtual, 16-week prospective study of individuals with frequent constipation from an online wellness platform that connects mobile consumer digital devices including wearable monitors capable of passively collecting steps, sleep, and heart rate data. Participants wore a Fitbit monitoring device for the study duration and were administered daily and monthly surveys assessing constipation symptom severity and medication usage. A set of 38 predetermined day-level behavioral activity metrics were computed from minute-level data streams for steps, sleep and heart rate. Mixed effects regression models were used to compare activity metrics between constipation status (irregular or constipated vs. regular day), medication use (medication day vs. non-medication day) and the interaction of medication day with irregular or constipation days, as well as to model likelihood to treat with constipation medications based on daily self-reported symptom severity. Correction for multiple comparisons was performed with the Benjamini–Hochberg procedure for false discovery rate. This study analyzed 1540 enrolled participants with completed daily surveys (mean age 36.6 sd 10.0, 72.8% female, 88.8% Caucasian). Of those, 1293 completed all monthly surveys and 756 had sufficient Fitbit data density for analysis of activity metrics. At a daily-level, 22 of the 38 activity metrics were significantly associated with bowel movement or medication treatment patterns for constipation. Participants were measured to have fewer steps on irregular days compared to regular days (−200 steps, 95% CI [−280, −120]), longer periods of inactivity on constipated days (9.1 min, 95% CI [5.2, 12.9]), reduced total sleep time on irregular and constipated days (−2.4 min, 95% CI [−4.3, −0.4] and −4.0 min, 95% CI [−6.5, −1.4], respectively). Participants reported greater severity of symptoms for bloating, hard stool, difficulty passing, and painful bowel movements on irregular, constipation and medication days compared to regular days with no medication. Interaction analysis of medication days with irregular or constipation days observed small increases in severity compared to non-medication days. Participants were 4.3% (95% CI 3.2, 5.3) more likely to treat with medication on constipated days versus regular. No significant increase in likelihood was observed for irregular days. Daily likelihood to treat increased for each 1-point change in symptom severity of bloating (2.4%, 95% CI [2.0, 2.7]), inability to pass (2.2%, 95% CI [1.4, 3.0]) and incomplete bowel movements (1.3%, 95% CI [0.9, 1.7]). This is the first large scale virtual prospective study describing the association between passively collected PGHD and constipation symptoms and severity at a day-to-day granularity level. Constipation status, irregular or constipated, was associated with a number of activity metrics in steps and sleep, and likelihood to treat with medication increased with increasing severity for a number of constipation symptoms. Given the small magnitude of effect, further research is needed to understand the clinical relevance of these results. PGHD may be useful as a tool for describing real world patient centered experiences for people with constipation.

Highlights

  • Constipation, a condition characterized by infrequent defecation, hard stools or straining, occurs commonly, among women and the elderly[1,2]

  • We report the first virtual large-scale prospective study to evaluate the utility of digitally collected active and passive Patient Generated Health Data (PGHD) for describing and linking symptom characteristics and medication use patterns for people with frequent constipation

  • Analysis of management approaches for constipation was conducted on those individuals who completed all the monthly surveys (n = 1293 or 82% of enrolled), while the behavioral activity analysis was performed on those individuals who satisfied the previously described data density criteria (n = 756 or 48% of enrolled)

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Summary

Introduction

Constipation, a condition characterized by infrequent defecation, hard stools or straining, occurs commonly, among women and the elderly[1,2]. A number of prescription and non-prescription constipation remedies exist, with non-prescription use playing an important role These medications have demonstrated efficacy in clinical trials[5,6]. Information on constipation management typically relies on cross sectional surveys, which are subject to recall and recency bias[9,10]. Validated activity surveys such as the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ), do not capture other behavioral dimensions such as sleep activity[11,12]. Clinical trials for constipation agents do not provide insight into real-world treatment patterns or patient experiences, and pharmacy or prescribing data typically do not reflect management strategies in the outpatient setting[13]. There is an opportunity for exploring new ways for generating real

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