Parkinson’s disease medication adjustments based on wearable device information compared to other methods: randomized clinical trial
Author
Date
2025-08-20Permanent link
http://hdl.handle.net/11351/13957DOI
10.1038/s41531-025-00977-2
ISSN
2373-8057
WOS
001553822700002
PMID
40835832
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by motor fluctuations, with alternating periods of good ("ON") and poor ("OFF") motor function. Monitoring these fluctuations is crucial for optimizing treatment, yet traditional methods rely on subjective patient reports. This multicenter, single-blind, cluster-randomized trial evaluated the effectiveness of three monitoring approaches in real-world clinical practice. Neurologists from 35 centers were randomized into three groups: one using clinical visit data alone, another incorporating Hauser diary entries, and a third integrating Parkinson's Holter (STAT-ON®) reports. A total of 156 patients were recruited. Changes in 'OFF time' from baseline to 26 weeks were minimal and non-significant across groups. Secondary outcomes, including 'ON time,' dyskinesia, and quality-of-life scores, showed no significant differences. These findings suggest that the choice of motor fluctuation monitoring method may not significantly impact clinical outcomes, underscoring the need for a broader understanding of how these monitoring tools are integrated and utilized in real-world settings. Trial registration: NCT04176302 (November 21, 2019 - ClinicalTrials.gov).
Keywords
Parkinson's disease; Wearable deviceBibliographic citation
Rodríguez-Molinero A, Pérez-López C, Caballol N, Buongiorno M, Ávila Rivera MA, López Ariztegui N, et al. Parkinson’s disease medication adjustments based on wearable device information compared to other methods: randomized clinical trial. npj Park Dis. 2025 Aug 20;11:249.
Audience
Professionals
This item appears in following collections
- HVH - Articles científics [4466]
- VHIR - Articles científics [1750]
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