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Feasibility of Mobile and Sensor Technology for Remote Monitoring in Cancer Care and Prevention.
- Peterson, Susan K;
- Basen-Engquist, Karen;
- Demark-Wahnefried, Wendy;
- Prokhorov, Alexander V;
- Shinn, Eileen H;
- Martch, Stephanie L;
- Beadle, Beth M;
- Garden, Adam S;
- Farcas, Emilia;
- Brandon Gunn, G;
- Fuller, Clifton D;
- Morrison, William H;
- Rosenthal, David I;
- Phan, Jack;
- Eng, Cathy;
- Cinciripini, Paul M;
- Karam-Hage, Maher A;
- Camero Garcia, Maria;
- Patrick, Kevin
- et al.
Abstract
Objectives. Remote monitoring (RM) of health-related outcomes may optimize cancer care and prevention outside of clinic settings. CYCORE is a software-based system for collection and analyses of sensor and mobile data. We evaluated CYCORE's feasibility in studies assessing: (1) physical functioning in colorectal cancer (CRC) patients; (2) swallowing exercise adherence in head and neck cancer (HNC) patients during radiation therapy; and (3) tobacco use in cancer survivors post-tobacco treatment (TTP). Methods. Participants completed RM: for CRC, blood pressure, activity, GPS; for HNC, video of swallowing exercises; for TTP, expired carbon monoxide. Patient-reported outcomes were assessed daily. Results. For CRC, HNC and TTP, respectively, 50, 37, and 50 participants achieved 96%, 84%, 96% completion rates. Also, 91-100% rated ease and self-efficacy as highly favorable, 72-100% gave equivalent ratings for overall satisfaction, 72-93% had low/no data privacy concerns. Conclusion. RM was highly feasible and acceptable for patients across diverse use cases.
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