CHE Technology Assessment Group, University of York, York, UK.
CRD Technology Assessment Group, University of York, York, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2024 Jul;28(30):1-187. doi: 10.3310/YDSL3294.
Parkinson's disease is a brain condition causing a progressive loss of co ordination and movement problems. Around 145,500 people have Parkinson's disease in the United Kingdom. Levodopa is the most prescribed treatment for managing motor symptoms in the early stages. Patients should be monitored by a specialist every 6-12 months for disease progression and treatment of adverse effects. Wearable devices may provide a novel approach to management by directly monitoring patients for bradykinesia, dyskinesia, tremor and other symptoms. They are intended to be used alongside clinical judgement.
To determine the clinical and cost-effectiveness of five devices for monitoring Parkinson's disease: Personal KinetiGraph, Kinesia 360, KinesiaU, PDMonitor and STAT-ON.
We performed systematic reviews of all evidence on the five devices, outcomes included: diagnostic accuracy, impact on decision-making, clinical outcomes, patient and clinician opinions and economic outcomes. We searched MEDLINE and 12 other databases/trial registries to February 2022. Risk of bias was assessed. Narrative synthesis was used to summarise all identified evidence, as the evidence was insufficient for meta-analysis. One included trial provided individual-level data, which was re-analysed. A de novo decision-analytic model was developed to estimate the cost-effectiveness of Personal KinetiGraph and Kinesia 360 compared to standard of care in the UK NHS over a 5-year time horizon. The base-case analysis considered two alternative monitoring strategies: one-time use and routine use of the device.
Fifty-seven studies of Personal KinetiGraph, 15 of STAT-ON, 3 of Kinesia 360, 1 of KinesiaU and 1 of PDMonitor were included. There was some evidence to suggest that Personal KinetiGraph can accurately measure bradykinesia and dyskinesia, leading to treatment modification in some patients, and a possible improvement in clinical outcomes when measured using the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale. The evidence for STAT-ON suggested it may be of value for diagnosing symptoms, but there is currently no evidence on its clinical impact. The evidence for Kinesia 360, KinesiaU and PDMonitor is insufficient to draw any conclusions on their value in clinical practice. The base-case results for Personal KinetiGraph compared to standard of care for one-time and routine use resulted in incremental cost-effectiveness ratios of £67,856 and £57,877 per quality-adjusted life-year gained, respectively, with a beneficial impact of the Personal KinetiGraph on Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale domains III and IV. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio results for Kinesia 360 compared to standard of care for one-time and routine use were £38,828 and £67,203 per quality-adjusted life-year gained, respectively.
The evidence was limited in extent and often low quality. For all devices, except Personal KinetiGraph, there was little to no evidence on the clinical impact of the technology.
Personal KinetiGraph could reasonably be used in practice to monitor patient symptoms and modify treatment where required. There is too little evidence on STAT-ON, Kinesia 360, KinesiaU or PDMonitor to be confident that they are clinically useful. The cost-effectiveness of remote monitoring appears to be largely unfavourable with incremental cost-effectiveness ratios in excess of £30,000 per quality-adjusted life-year across a range of alternative assumptions. The main driver of cost-effectiveness was the durability of improvements in patient symptoms.
This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42022308597.
This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Evidence Synthesis programme (NIHR award ref: NIHR135437) and is published in full in ; Vol. 28, No. 30. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.
帕金森病是一种导致协调和运动问题逐渐丧失的脑部疾病。在英国,约有 145500 人患有帕金森病。左旋多巴是管理早期运动症状的最常用治疗方法。患者应每 6-12 个月由专家监测一次疾病进展和不良反应的治疗情况。可穿戴设备可以通过直接监测患者的运动迟缓、运动障碍、震颤和其他症状,为管理提供新的方法。这些设备旨在与临床判断一起使用。
确定五种用于监测帕金森病的设备的临床和成本效益:个人 KinetiGraph、Kinesia 360、KinesiaU、PDMonitor 和 STAT-ON。
我们对这五种设备的所有证据进行了系统评价,结果包括:诊断准确性、对决策的影响、临床结果、患者和临床医生的意见以及经济结果。我们检索了 MEDLINE 和其他 12 个数据库/试验登记处,截至 2022 年 2 月。评估了风险偏倚。由于证据不足以进行荟萃分析,因此使用叙述性综合方法总结了所有已确定的证据。一项纳入的试验提供了个体水平的数据,对这些数据进行了重新分析。为了估计个人 KinetiGraph 和 Kinesia 360 在英国 NHS 中与标准护理相比的成本效益,开发了一个新的决策分析模型,在 5 年的时间范围内进行了比较。基本案例分析考虑了两种替代监测策略:一次性使用和常规使用设备。
纳入了 57 项个人 KinetiGraph 研究、15 项 STAT-ON 研究、3 项 Kinesia 360 研究、1 项 KinesiaU 研究和 1 项 PDMonitor 研究。有一些证据表明个人 KinetiGraph 可以准确测量运动迟缓和运动障碍,从而导致一些患者改变治疗方法,并可能通过使用统一帕金森病评定量表改善临床结果。STAT-ON 的证据表明它可能对诊断症状有价值,但目前尚无关于其临床影响的证据。Kinesia 360、KinesiaU 和 PDMonitor 的证据不足以得出其在临床实践中价值的任何结论。个人 KinetiGraph 与标准护理相比的基本案例结果,一次性和常规使用的增量成本效益比分别为每获得 1 个质量调整生命年 67856 英镑和 57877 英镑,个人 KinetiGraph 对统一帕金森病评定量表的第三和第四域有有益的影响。Kinesia 360 与标准护理相比的增量成本效益比结果,一次性和常规使用的分别为每获得 1 个质量调整生命年 38828 英镑和 67203 英镑。
证据的范围和质量有限。除个人 KinetiGraph 外,其他所有设备都几乎没有关于该技术临床影响的证据。
个人 KinetiGraph 可以合理地用于监测患者的症状,并在需要时修改治疗方法。关于 STAT-ON、Kinesia 360、KinesiaU 或 PDMonitor,几乎没有证据表明它们在临床上有用。远程监测的成本效益似乎在很大程度上是不利的,在一系列替代假设下,每获得 1 个质量调整生命年的增量成本效益比超过 30000 英镑。成本效益的主要驱动因素是患者症状改善的持久性。
本研究已在 PROSPERO CRD42022308597 注册。
本奖项由英国国家卫生与保健研究所(NIHR)循证合成计划(NIHR 奖号:NIHR135437)资助,并在;第 28 卷,第 30 期。有关该奖项的更多信息,请访问 NIHR 资助和奖项网站。