Accurate prediction of clinical stroke scales and improved biomarkers of motor impairment from robotic measurements

Author:

Agrafiotis Dimitris K.ORCID,Yang Eric,Littman Gary S.,Byttebier Geert,Dipietro Laura,DiBernardo Allitia,Chavez Juan C.,Rykman Avrielle,McArthur Kate,Hajjar Karim,Lees Kennedy R.,Volpe Bruce T.ORCID,Krams Michael,Krebs Hermano I.

Abstract

Objective One of the greatest challenges in clinical trial design is dealing with the subjectivity and variability introduced by human raters when measuring clinical end-points. We hypothesized that robotic measures that capture the kinematics of human movements collected longitudinally in patients after stroke would bear a significant relationship to the ordinal clinical scales and potentially lead to the development of more sensitive motor biomarkers that could improve the efficiency and cost of clinical trials. Materials and methods We used clinical scales and a robotic assay to measure arm movement in 208 patients 7, 14, 21, 30 and 90 days after acute ischemic stroke at two separate clinical sites. The robots are low impedance and low friction interactive devices that precisely measure speed, position and force, so that even a hemiparetic patient can generate a complete measurement profile. These profiles were used to develop predictive models of the clinical assessments employing a combination of artificial ant colonies and neural network ensembles. Results The resulting models replicated commonly used clinical scales to a cross-validated R2 of 0.73, 0.75, 0.63 and 0.60 for the Fugl-Meyer, Motor Power, NIH stroke and modified Rankin scales, respectively. Moreover, when suitably scaled and combined, the robotic measures demonstrated a significant increase in effect size from day 7 to 90 over historical data (1.47 versus 0.67). Discussion and conclusion These results suggest that it is possible to derive surrogate biomarkers that can significantly reduce the sample size required to power future stroke clinical trials.

Funder

Wyeth

Janssen Research and Development

Janssen Pharmaceuticals

Janssen Research & Development

GSL Statistical Consulting

Bioconstat Bvba

Biogen-Idec

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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