Use of smartphone-based remote assessments of multiple sclerosis in Floodlight Open, a global, prospective, open-access study

Other authors

Institut Català de la Salut

[Oh J] Division of Neurology, St. Michael’s Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada. [Capezzuto L, Kriara L, Schjodt-Eriksen J, van Beek J, Bernasconi C] F. Hofmann-La Roche Ltd., Basel, Switzerland. [Montalban X] Servei de Neurologia-Neuroimmunologia, Centre d’Esclerosi Múltiple de Catalunya (CEMCAT), Barcelona, Spain. Vall d’Hebron Hospital Universitari, Barcelona, Spain

Vall d'Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus

Publication date

2024-02-06T13:40:38Z

2024-02-06T13:40:38Z

2024-01-02

Abstract

Multiple sclerosis; Outcomes research


Esclerosis múltiple; Resultados de la investigación


Esclerosi múltiple; Recerca de resultats


Floodlight Open was a global, open-access, digital-only study designed to understand the drivers and barriers in deployment and use of a smartphone app in a naturalistic setting and broad study population of people with and without multiple sclerosis (MS). The study utilised the Floodlight Open app: a ‘bring-your-own-device’ solution that remotely measures a user’s mood, cognition, hand motor function, and gait and postural stability via smartphone sensor-based tests requiring active user input (‘active tests’). Levels of mobility of study participants (‘life-space measurement’) were passively measured. Study data from these tests were made available via an open-access platform. Data from 1350 participants with self-declared MS and 1133 participants with self-declared non-MS from 17 countries across four continents were included in this report. Overall, MS participants provided active test data for a mean duration of 5.6 weeks or a mean duration of 19 non-consecutive days. This duration increased among MS participants who persisted beyond the first week to a mean of 10.3 weeks or 36.5 non-consecutive days. Passively collected life-space measurement data were generated by MS participants for a mean duration of 9.8 weeks or 50.6 non-consecutive days. This duration increased to 16.3 weeks/85.1 non-consecutive days among MS participants who persisted beyond the first week. Older age, self-declared MS disease status, and clinical supervision as part of concomitant clinical research were all significantly associated with higher persistence of the use of the Floodlight Open app. MS participants performed significantly worse than non-MS participants on four out of seven active tests. The findings from this multinational study inform future research to improve the dynamics of persistence of use of digital monitoring tools and further highlight challenges and opportunities in applying them to support MS clinical care.


The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd., Basel, Switzerland provided financial support for the study and publication of this manuscript.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Nature Portfolio

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Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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