Abstract

Motor fluctuations in Parkinson’s disease are characterized by unpredictability in the timing and duration of dopaminergic therapeutic benefits on symptoms, including bradykinesia and rigidity. These fluctuations significantly impair the quality of life of many Parkinson’s patients. However, current clinical evaluation tools are not designed for the continuous, naturalistic (real-world) symptom monitoring needed to optimize clinical therapy to treat fluctuations. Although commercially available wearable motor monitoring, used over multiple days, can augment neurological decision making, the feasibility of rapid and dynamic detection of motor fluctuations is unclear. So far, applied wearable monitoring algorithms are trained on group data. In this study, we investigated the influence of individual model training on short timescale classification of naturalistic bradykinesia fluctuations in Parkinson’s patients using a single-wrist accelerometer. As part of the Parkinson@Home study protocol, 20 Parkinson patients were recorded with bilateral wrist accelerometers for a one hour OFF medication session and a one hour ON medication session during unconstrained activities in their own homes. Kinematic metrics were extracted from the accelerometer data from the bodyside with the largest unilateral bradykinesia fluctuations across medication states. The kinematic accelerometer features were compared over the 1 h duration of recording, and medication-state classification analyses were performed on 1 min segments of data. Then, we analyzed the influence of individual versus group model training, data window length, and total number of training patients included in group model training, on classification. Statistically significant areas under the curves (AUCs) for medication induced bradykinesia fluctuation classification were seen in 85% of the Parkinson patients at the single minute timescale using the group models. Individually trained models performed at the same level as the group trained models (mean AUC both 0.70, standard deviation respectively 0.18 and 0.10) despite the small individual training dataset. AUCs of the group models improved as the length of the feature windows was increased to 300 s, and with additional training patient datasets. We were able to show that medication-induced fluctuations in bradykinesia can be classified using wrist-worn accelerometry at the time scale of a single minute. Rapid, naturalistic Parkinson motor monitoring has the clinical potential to evaluate dynamic symptomatic and therapeutic fluctuations and help tailor treatments on a fast timescale.

Highlights

  • Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a disabling neurodegenerative disorder characterized by motor and non-motor symptoms that affect patients’ motor performance and quality of life (QoL) [1,2,3]

  • We investigated the performance of machine learning classification models identifying rapid, medication-induced motor fluctuations in PD patients

  • We focused symptom decoding on bradykinesia since this cardinal feature of PD has been found to be more challenging to detect with motion sensors than tremor or dyskinesia [1,33]

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Summary

Introduction

Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a disabling neurodegenerative disorder characterized by motor and non-motor symptoms that affect patients’ motor performance and quality of life (QoL) [1,2,3]. Wearing-off motor fluctuations are defined as inconsistent therapeutic benefits on symptoms such as bradykinesia and rigidity, despite regular dopaminergic delivery [6]. These motor fluctuations and other dopaminergic-related side effects can markedly impair patients’ QoL [7]. Motor fluctuations are a primary indication for consideration of deep brain stimulation (DBS) [1,8]. Adequate monitoring of motor fluctuations is essential for treatment evaluation, both in the presence and absence of DBS, and wearable motion sensing represents an appealing approach to support this quantification [9,10], several challenges remain to be addressed [11,12]

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