Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The purpose of this research study is to collect health and physiological data using commercially available wristband fitness tracker devices (FitBit and Garmin devices) to help determine their accuracy and reliability at measuring percent of night spent in REM sleep, oxygen desaturation, and apnea hypopnea index compared with currently available methods of in-laboratory polysomnogram and home sleep testing.
Full description
To date, there is an incomplete picture of the reliability of wearable device trackers to depict sleep quantity and sleep staging information. Prior studies have compared various iterations of wearable sleep trackers to the so-called gold standard of PSG, often but not universally in health populations. A number of important observations have been made to date.
For the current study, the investigators do not plan to examine an epoch by epoch assessment of sleep staging as a primary analysis, in part due to its inherent limitations consisting of: (a) lack of raw data from device; (b) difficulty matching up epochs due to differences in timing of the so-called "window" of time observed (30 seconds versus one minute); (c) differences in sleep time recording, thus resulting in different denominators of sleep time; (d) poor test-retest or interrater variability for PSG scoring itself, even among expert academic centers performing epoch by epoch analyses of the very same PSG. Instead, the investigators plan to focus on a more clinically accessible and, for the consumer, more relevant question: how well does the amount (or the percentage) of REM sleep and total sleep time estimated by the wearable sleep tracker correlate with a simultaneous sleep study? Secondary analyses will also assess sleep/wake and additional sleep stage comparisons, and assessments of respiratory parameters of oxygen desaturation, and a comparison of wrist tracker device and PSG sleep compared to Level 3 home sleep test derived recording time, in a population of subjects being evaluated for sleep apnea and other sleep disorders. Summary assessments of the sleep variables for the night will be compared to assess the accuracy of the wearable devices and Level 3 home sleep test to polysomnogram. Through the study, the investigators hope to contribute to building a body of evidence assessing the level of accuracy of the latest generation of consumer wearable sleep tracking devices. The investigators plan to use two devices, the FBI3 and the GVS5 fitness activity trackers, for the study, as these devices are among the most recent versions available, are widely used, are highly affordable (models under $150), and provide ease of measurement (as no continuous Bluetooth smartphone connection is needed to collect data).
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion criteria:
Exclusion criteria
86 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Alec Platt, MD; Eric Abreu, MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal