Use of Device Data to Predict Frailty in Individuals
Status: | Enrolling by invitation |
---|---|
Conditions: | Cardiology |
Therapuetic Areas: | Cardiology / Vascular Diseases |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 65 - Any |
Updated: | 9/20/2018 |
Start Date: | September 7, 2017 |
End Date: | March 31, 2019 |
Use of Device Data to Predict Frailty in Individuals With Cardiovascular Implantable Electrical Devices: Pilot Study
This is an investigation to examine the correlation and predictive ability of activity
measures obtained from cardiovascular implantable electrical devices.
measures obtained from cardiovascular implantable electrical devices.
Technology is providing new opportunities to gain insight into patient health in a manner far
superior to what can be obtained from routine office visits. For geriatric patients, frailty
is one such measure, which has been shown to have a negative correlation with outcomes,
including hospitalizations, complications following invasive procedures, and overall
mortality. Methods to quantify frailty have been highly limited and somewhat controversial,
largely because of their cross-sectional nature. Efforts to obtain longitudinal measures of
frailty using activity monitors and other wearable devices have been promising, although they
are limited by patient cooperation and cost.
In addition to their therapeutic functions, cardiovascular implantable electrical devices
(CIEDs) collect large amounts of data on individuals in whom they are implanted, which can be
accessed during office visits as well as remotely. Importantly, the data is obtained
passively and routinely from all patients, requiring little to no additional effort or
expense. The possibility that activity measures from CIEDs could be used to evaluate frailty,
as well as other outcomes, would provide a powerful tool for clinicians to apply data science
directly to patients.
This pilot investigation will assess the feasibility of using CIED-derived activity data to
predict frailty, and other outcomes, in older populations. The investigators plan to enroll
subjects in whom CIEDs are implanted from the University of Colorado Hospital Device clinic,
and analyze their data to assess the correlation of daily activity with frailty measures, as
well as with cardiac and clinical outcomes.
superior to what can be obtained from routine office visits. For geriatric patients, frailty
is one such measure, which has been shown to have a negative correlation with outcomes,
including hospitalizations, complications following invasive procedures, and overall
mortality. Methods to quantify frailty have been highly limited and somewhat controversial,
largely because of their cross-sectional nature. Efforts to obtain longitudinal measures of
frailty using activity monitors and other wearable devices have been promising, although they
are limited by patient cooperation and cost.
In addition to their therapeutic functions, cardiovascular implantable electrical devices
(CIEDs) collect large amounts of data on individuals in whom they are implanted, which can be
accessed during office visits as well as remotely. Importantly, the data is obtained
passively and routinely from all patients, requiring little to no additional effort or
expense. The possibility that activity measures from CIEDs could be used to evaluate frailty,
as well as other outcomes, would provide a powerful tool for clinicians to apply data science
directly to patients.
This pilot investigation will assess the feasibility of using CIED-derived activity data to
predict frailty, and other outcomes, in older populations. The investigators plan to enroll
subjects in whom CIEDs are implanted from the University of Colorado Hospital Device clinic,
and analyze their data to assess the correlation of daily activity with frailty measures, as
well as with cardiac and clinical outcomes.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Individuals followed in the UCH device clinic
- Individuals with CIED implanted
- Age over 65
Exclusion Criteria:
- Unable/unwilling to provide informed consent
We found this trial at
1
site
University of Colorado Denver The University of Colorado Denver | Anschutz Medical Campus provides a...
Click here to add this to my saved trials