Wearable motion-based platform for functional spine health assessment

Author:

Mageswaran PrasathORCID,Dufour Jonathan,Aurand Alexander,Knapik Gregory,Hani Hamed,Blakaj Dukagjin M,Khan Safdar,Hussain Nasir,Tiwari Maneesh,Vallabh JayeshORCID,Weaver Tristan,Marras William S

Abstract

IntroductionLow back pain is a significant burden to society and the lack of reliable outcome measures, combined with a prevailing inability to quantify the biopsychosocial elements implicated in the disease, impedes clinical decision-making and distorts treatment efficacy. This paper aims to validate the utility of a biopsychosocial spine platform to provide standardized wearable sensor-derived functional motion assessments to assess spine function and differentiate between healthy controls and patients. Secondarily, we explored the correlation between these motion features and subjective biopsychosocial measures.MethodsAn observational study was conducted on healthy controls (n=50) and patients with low back pain (n=50) to validate platform utility. The platform was used to conduct functional assessments along with patient-reported outcome assessments to holistically document cohort differences. Our primary outcomes were motion features; and our secondary outcomes were biopsychosocial measures (pain, function, etc).ResultsOur results demonstrated statistically significant differences in motion features between healthy and patient cohorts across anatomical planes. Importantly, we found velocity and acceleration in the axial plane showed the largest difference, with healthy controls having 49.7% and 55.7% higher values, respectively, than patients. In addition, we found significant correlations between motion features and biopsychosocial measures for pain, physical function and social role only.ConclusionsOur study validated the use of wearable sensor-derived functional motion metrics in differentiating healthy controls and patients. Collectively, this technology has the potential to facilitate holistic biopsychosocial evaluations to enhance spine care and improve patient outcomes.Trial registration numberNCT05776771.

Funder

NIH

Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,General Medicine

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