Abstract

Background: The timed 25-foot walk (T25FW) is widely used as a clinic performance measure, but has yet to be directly validated against gait speed in the home environment.Objectives: To develop an accurate method for remote assessment of walking speed and to test how predictive the clinic T25FW is for real-life walking.Methods: An AX3-Axivity tri-axial accelerometer was positioned on 32 MS patients (Expanded Disability Status Scale [EDSS] 0–6) in the clinic, who subsequently wore it at home for up to 7 days. Gait speed was calculated from these data using both a model developed with healthy volunteers and individually personalized models generated from a machine learning algorithm.Results: The healthy volunteer model predicted gait speed poorly for more disabled people with MS. However, the accuracy of individually personalized models was high regardless of disability (R-value = 0.98, p-value = 1.85 × 10−22). With the latter, we confirmed that the clinic T25FW is strongly predictive of the maximum sustained gait speed in the home environment (R-value = 0.89, p-value = 4.34 × 10−8).Conclusion: Remote gait monitoring with individually personalized models is accurate for patients with MS. Using these models, we have directly validated the clinical meaningfulness (i.e., predictiveness) of the clinic T25FW for the first time.

Highlights

  • Tools for the sensitive assessment of disability and its progression in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) are needed [1]

  • Most prior approaches have applied generic models for estimation of gait speeds from actigraphy

  • We tested whether a patient personalized gait model could more accurately estimate gait speed than a generic model based on gait characteristics of healthy volunteers

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Summary

Introduction

Tools for the sensitive assessment of disability and its progression in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) are needed [1]. A major challenge has been to define measures that meaningfully reflect the concept of interest and are sensitive to change over time for the full range of disability. At present, walking speed is evaluated only in the context of short test walks in the clinic standardized as the Timed 25-Foot Walk (T25FW) or the Six-Minute Walk (6MW) [10]. Even though these tests are believed to be reliable measures, the extent to which. The timed 25-foot walk (T25FW) is widely used as a clinic performance measure, but has yet to be directly validated against gait speed in the home environment

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