2023
DOI: 10.1007/s00702-023-02659-w
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A smartphone-based tapping task as a marker of medication response in Parkinson’s disease: a proof of concept study

Abstract: Tapping tasks have the potential to distinguish between ON–OFF fluctuations in Parkinson’s disease (PD) possibly aiding assessment of medication status in e-diaries and research. This proof of concept study aims to assess the feasibility and accuracy of a smartphone-based tapping task (developed as part of the cloudUPDRS-project) to discriminate between ON–OFF used in the home setting without supervision. 32 PD patients performed the task before their first medication intake, followed by two test sessions afte… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…These limitations challenge the interpretation of these assessments over short time intervals. An increasing number of studies reports on the application of active, sometimes gamified, motor assessments either to assess naturalistic motor or cognitive symptoms ( Adams et al, 2023 ; Broeder et al, 2023 ; Crook-Rumsey et al, 2023 ; Liikkanen et al, 2023 ), or to improve symptoms due to training exercises ( Gallou-Guyot et al, 2022 ). They mostly report good feasibilities, some requiring remote support, good test accuracies ( Broeder et al, 2023 ), but also remaining challenges around the interpretation ( Page et al, 2022 ; Liikkanen et al, 2023 ).…”
Section: Current Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…These limitations challenge the interpretation of these assessments over short time intervals. An increasing number of studies reports on the application of active, sometimes gamified, motor assessments either to assess naturalistic motor or cognitive symptoms ( Adams et al, 2023 ; Broeder et al, 2023 ; Crook-Rumsey et al, 2023 ; Liikkanen et al, 2023 ), or to improve symptoms due to training exercises ( Gallou-Guyot et al, 2022 ). They mostly report good feasibilities, some requiring remote support, good test accuracies ( Broeder et al, 2023 ), but also remaining challenges around the interpretation ( Page et al, 2022 ; Liikkanen et al, 2023 ).…”
Section: Current Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is not entirely clear whether all developed protocols for motor functional assessment can be performed as self-tests by the patients themselves or with the assistance of a healthcare professional ( 37 ). Some studies have aimed to assess the reliability of self-testing, but further research involving larger and diverse populations is needed to reach a consensus ( 37 , 38 ). We understand that for now, the apps should be used by professionals to safeguard correct assessment until more evidence is available.…”
Section: Limitations and Considerations For Digital Interventions Usi...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In another PD study, motor scores for hand resting tremor (MDS-UPDRS item 3.17) were predicted with 85.5% accuracy using a custom-built wearable device assembled with an accelerometer and a gyroscope [32]. Aside from inertial sensors, smartphone-based methods for capturing finger-tapping tasks have shown reliable correlations with MDS-UPDRS motor scores [26,33]. Similarly, video-based recordings of movements are useful for predicting expert-rated MDS-UPDRS motor scores [34,35].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%