Next Article in Journal
Brain Responses to Emotional Stimuli after Eicosapentaenoic Acid and Docosahexaenoic Acid Treatments in Major Depressive Disorder: Toward Personalized Medicine with Anti-Inflammatory Nutraceuticals
Next Article in Special Issue
Acceptability of a Patient Portal (Opal) in HIV Clinical Care: A Feasibility Study
Previous Article in Journal
A Wide Spectrum of Genetic Disorders Causing Severe Childhood Epilepsy in Taiwan: A Case Series of Ultrarare Genetic Cause and Novel Mutation Analysis in a Pilot Study
Previous Article in Special Issue
Compilation and Analysis of Web-Based Orthopedic Personalized Predictive Tools: A Scoping Review
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Review

Digital Phenotyping and Patient-Generated Health Data for Outcome Measurement in Surgical Care: A Scoping Review

1
Department of Surgery and Perioperative Care, Dell Medical School, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA
2
School of Medicine, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY 10595, USA
3
Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, USA
4
Department of Medical Education, Dell Medical School, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
J. Pers. Med. 2020, 10(4), 282; https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm10040282
Submission received: 22 October 2020 / Revised: 8 December 2020 / Accepted: 11 December 2020 / Published: 15 December 2020

Abstract

:
Digital phenotyping—the moment-by-moment quantification of human phenotypes in situ using data related to activity, behavior, and communications, from personal digital devices, such as smart phones and wearables—has been gaining interest. Personalized health information captured within free-living settings using such technologies may better enable the application of patient-generated health data (PGHD) to provide patient-centered care. The primary objective of this scoping review is to characterize the application of digital phenotyping and digitally captured active and passive PGHD for outcome measurement in surgical care. Secondarily, we synthesize the body of evidence to define specific areas for further work. We performed a systematic search of four bibliographic databases using terms related to “digital phenotyping and PGHD,” “outcome measurement,” and “surgical care” with no date limits. We registered the study (Open Science Framework), followed strict inclusion/exclusion criteria, performed screening, extraction, and synthesis of results in line with the PRISMA Extension for Scoping Reviews. A total of 224 studies were included. Published studies have accelerated in the last 5 years, originating in 29 countries (mostly from the USA, n = 74, 33%), featuring original prospective work (n = 149, 66%). Studies spanned 14 specialties, most commonly orthopedic surgery (n = 129, 58%), and had a postoperative focus (n = 210, 94%). Most of the work involved research-grade wearables (n = 130, 58%), prioritizing the capture of activity (n = 165, 74%) and biometric data (n = 100, 45%), with a view to providing a tracking/monitoring function (n = 115, 51%) for the management of surgical patients. Opportunities exist for further work across surgical specialties involving smartphones, communications data, comparison with patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), applications focusing on prediction of outcomes, monitoring, risk profiling, shared decision making, and surgical optimization. The rapidly evolving state of the art in digital phenotyping and capture of PGHD offers exciting prospects for outcome measurement in surgical care pending further work and consideration related to clinical care, technology, and implementation.

Graphical Abstract

1. Introduction

Technology-enabled solutions that capture patient-generated health data (PGHD)—data related to activity, mobility, cognition, behavior, mood and social interactions—are rapidly evolving with the aim of a more personalized, patient-centered, and data-driven approach to the delivery of surgical care [1,2,3,4,5]. The concept of “digital phenotyping” was first coined in 2015 by J.P Onnela as the moment-by-moment quantification of individual human phenotypes in situ using data related to activity, behavior, and communications from personal digital devices, such as smartphones and wearable sensors (wearables) [6,7,8,9,10]. While the first smartphones were developed around 1992, wider utilization and applications capturing PGHD occurred toward the late 2000s. The acquisition of PGHD in the form of patient-reported outcome measurements (PROMs) is commonplace in clinical research and increasingly common in clinical care. PROMs are questionnaires that quantify the patient’s perspective of their physical, emotional, and social health, and are commonly collected using tablet devices and web-based, online portals [11,12,13,14,15]. The electronic capture and utility of PROMs has transformed the evaluation of health outcomes in surgical research, partly due to well-defined surgical pathways and time points during the preoperative baseline to postoperative recovery and rehabilitation [12,16]. However, the adoption of PROMs in clinical practice is limited by the burden placed on patients to interpret and complete surveys, is often restricted to the clinical encounter, and associated with several administrative and logistical barriers in sustaining longitudinal data collection, especially in busy, resource-limited settings [15,17].

1.1. Rationale

The continuous capture of passive PGHD in “real time” may overcome these limitations via digital phenotyping. However, little is known around digital phenotyping and PGHD in the context of outcome measurement in surgical care. An individual’s digital phenotype and how they interact with these devices aims to provide dynamic insights around the impact of a given condition on the patient’s lived experience, both within and outside health care settings. This rich data source may augment the way we traditionally acquire health information via physical assessment (clinical history and examination), and investigations (vital signs monitoring, laboratory tests, medical imaging), and further advance the tracking and surveillance of health, enhance decision making at the point of care, trigger the timely detection of clinical deterioration, and better predict surgical outcomes [13,14,18]. While a growing evidence base supports the value of digital phenotyping and PGHD to provide actionable data and targeted interventions, few have comprehensively characterized this technology in surgery or mapped current concepts for driving research and development in this field. The overarching goal of this study was to conduct a rapid scoping review of digital phenotyping and PGHD for outcome measurement in surgery to generate a repository of evidence for the current state of the art, identify knowledge gaps, and guide recommendations for future work.

1.2. Objectives

The primary objective was to map the application of digital phenotyping and digitally captured active and passive PGHD for outcome measurement in surgical care by study characteristics, clinical characteristics, technological/data characteristics, and functional characteristics. The secondary objective was to synthesize the body of evidence to define specific areas of further work necessary to translate this technology from research bench to surgical practice. Ultimately, this review aims to inform stakeholders in advancing the field of patient-centered digital health and outcome measurement in surgical care.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Study Design

We performed a rapid scoping review as a streamlined approach to synthesizing evidence for emergent research and development in this field [19,20,21]. We started with a strategic search applied to multiple electronic databases using search terms related to key concepts within our primary and secondary objectives. This was followed by a stepwise process of screening, data extraction, and synthesis.

2.2. Protocol and Registration

The protocol was developed a priori, guided by the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis—Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) (Appendix A) [20], and study registered prospectively with the Open Science Framework, Center for Open Science (Registration No. url: osf.io/p9c7u).

2.3. Eligibility Criteria

Eligibility criteria were as follows: studies focused on adult patients undergoing any form of surgical care at any phase along the care pathway (i.e., preoperative evaluation, perioperative care, postoperative recovery and rehabilitation), involving personal digital devices used to capture active and/or passive PGHD, describing outcome measurement(s) across any health domain, within original studies (prospective, retrospective, technical feasibility) in peer-reviewed journals that were available in the English language. Studies were excluded if they involved pediatric and adolescent patients, non-surgical contexts, lacked capture of any form of PGHD, involved digital solutions to collect and synthesize PROMs only, or were reviews, commentaries, case studies, without original data, and not available in the English language.

2.4. Search and Data Sources

We developed a search strategy guided by our lead institutional librarian [IV], who is experienced in performing systematic reviews. Following rounds of refinement among the research team we defined and combined terms related to “digital phenotyping and PGHD” (concept A), “outcome measurement” (concept B), and “surgical care” (concept C) (Appendix B). Search engines were selected by consensus among authors and our librarian expert then deployed the final search strategy across the following electronic bibliographic databases: PubMed (NLM), Web of Science (Clarivate Analytics, Philadelphia, PA, USA), Cochrane Library (Wiley, Hoboken, NJ, USA), and IEEE Xplore; Databases were searched on 1 June 2020 and refreshed on 1 July of 2020 to ensure we acquired an up-to-date set of articles before reporting findings. No limits were set in publication dates for search purposes, however results spanned years from 1994 to 2020. Search results were limited by language (English only) and resource type (journal articles only). Search results were exported into and deduplicated with the citation management tool EndNote. The search was supplemented by scanning reference lists of relevant reviews.

2.5. Data Screening

Three investigators (EL/VG/JM) independently screened titles and abstracts from the full set of articles based on eligibility criteria. For quality control and to increase consistency among reviewers, all reviewers initially screened a set of 25 publications at the outset and discussed the results before continuing with the screening process. Subsets of articles from batches were cross-checked by investigators (PJ/EL/VG) for consistency and quality assurance. Excluded studies were coded with reasons for exclusion using the criteria established a priori. Any differences in judgment on inclusion/exclusion of studies were resolved by group discussions with the senior investigator (AH) as needed. Full-text articles were retrieved for further independent review and final assessment for eligibility (PJ/EU/VG). Number of articles screened, and articles excluded including duplicates were logged for each source of evidence and presented in a PRISMA flow diagram (Appendix C). The final study set for data extraction was thus identified.

2.6. Data Charting Process

Two investigators (PJ/EL) jointly developed the data charting system including electronic forms for screening, data extraction, and synthesis of relevant information (Microsoft Excel, v16.21, USA). The screening form logged articles for inclusion/exclusion, allowed tagging of queried citations for further discussion and recording reasons for excluding articles. The extraction form included parameters developed in relation to our primary objective, i.e., study characteristics, clinical characteristics, technological/data characteristics and functional characteristics. Data items for each category were selected by four investigators (PJ/EL/VG/JM) who charted data independently. These investigators regrouped at regular points throughout the screening and extraction phase to discuss and iterate the data charting parameters. Any inconsistencies were resolved by additional input from the senior author (AH) as needed.

2.7. Data Items and Extraction

We finally abstracted data from the full text (PDFs) of the final set of selected articles on: study characteristics (lead author, study year, country of origin, study design, total number of patients), clinical characteristics (surgical specialty, surgical procedure, point of application along care pathway), technological and data characteristics (type of device including brand/proprietary names, type of data), and functional characteristics (types of clinical function and utility) with additional notes to document salient points.

2.8. Appraisal of Individual Sources of Evidence

We focused on presenting the results as a “map” of data utilizing data visualizations and data tabulations along with a descriptive narrative as per published guidelines, in keeping with a broad and scoping systematic review [20,22]. While we closely reviewed the full text articles during the data extraction phase, we did not proceed with a formal critical appraisal partly given the heterogeneity of the study set (varying study designs in particular), and partly due to the lack of a universal and validated quality assessment tool.

2.9. Synthesis of Results

We synthesized results using coding and grouping of relevant data elements using our electronic database. with descriptive analysis using frequencies and percentages within each category of extracted data. Following consensus discussions on metrics of interest by three investigators [PJ/EL/VG], we proceeded to tabulate data and generate visualizations using a data analytics package (Tableau, 2020. v3.0, Mountain View, CA, USA). Visualizations included a geographical chart of country of origin for selected articles; bubble charts and other standard charts for other metrics of relevance, and a Sankey-type flow diagram (@SankeyMATIC, Virginia, USA) to provide an overview of the specific inter-relation between technological, data and functional characteristics.

3. Results

3.1. Initial Evaluation and Selection of Studies

A total of 3001 citations were generated from the original literature search and after adjusting for duplicates (n = 575), 2426 remained for screening. After reviewing titles and abstracts, 2157 were excluded by criteria leaving 269 publications for full-text review. A further 45 studies were excluded based on a lack of alignment with our study objectives and leaving a final set of 224 articles (Table 1) (Figure 1) (Appendix B).

3.2. Study Characteristics

The number of studies increased over time (Figure 2). Studies originated from 29 countries with the majority performed in the USA (n = 74, 33%) (Figure 3). The majority of studies featured original prospective work (n = 149, 67%), and a substantial proportion of studies involved technical validation and feasibility of digital solutions (n = 50, 22%) (Figure 4). The cohorts of patients involved in these studies ranged from 5 to 406 participants.

3.3. Clinical Characteristics

Studies spanned 14 surgical specialties with the majority being performed in the context of orthopedic surgery (n = 129, 58%) and procedures including total joint replacement, fracture and soft tissue trauma reconstruction, joint fusion, brachial plexus injury, rotator cuff repair, anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction and carpal tunnel release (Figure 5) (Appendix D). The majority of studies were conducted in the postoperative phase (n = 210, 94%).

3.4. Technological/Data Characteristics

Overall, the majority of studies involved research-grade wearables (i.e., non-commercially available wearable sensors/sensors for research purposes only) (n = 129, 58%), and consumer-grade wearables (i.e., commercially available wearable sensors produced for the consumer market but used for scientific evaluation) (n = 78, 35%) over smartphone (n = 15, 7%) or other devices (n = 6, 3%). There was a predominant focus on capturing activity (n = 165, 74%), and biometric data (n = 100, 45%), as opposed to communications data (n = 2, 1%) (Figure 6). As a single publication could fall under multiple technological or data characteristic categories, the summed percentages are greater than 100%.
The width of each flow is proportional to number of studies channeled from one category to another, i.e., the flow of number of articles published by technology type that involved the capture of activity, biometric and/or communications data in order to provide a given function

3.5. Functional Characteristics

The focus of the majority of studies was on tracking/monitoring of surgical patients (n = 115, 51%), and assessment of technical feasibility (n = 78, 35%), versus prediction of surgical outcomes (n = 32, 14%), risk profiling (n = 20, 9%), and surgical optimization (n = 25, 11%). A wide range of technologies were utilized such as activity trackers, smartphone applications, research- and commercial-grade wearables, and other sensors (Appendix E) alongside numerous types of activity, biometric, and communication-related data points (Figure 7). As a single publication could be categorized in multiple functional characteristics, the sum of the values and sum of percentages is higher than 224 and 100%, respectively.
Notably, various patient-reported outcome measures were utilized in more than half of the studies (n = 121, 54%) and mostly used to validate wearable data. Findings from these evaluations, such as those assessing correlation between data types, were highly variable. PROMs in these studies included measures of condition-specific health (e.g., Hip Disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score, HOOS) (n = 86, 71%), general health and quality of life (e.g., Patient Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS)-Global, RAND 36-Item Short Form Health Survey) (n = 54, 45%), and psychosocial factors (e.g., PHQ-9) (n = 6, 5%). A single publication could utilize more than one PROM; thus, the values are higher than the total 121 of publications.

4. Discussion

Digital phenotyping and PGHD has been studied in a range of surgical contexts. Smartphones and wearable sensors have been used to capture an array of activity/mobility, biometric, and communication-related data. Studies have been conducted to establish the feasibility of these technologies to gather information from patients, while also assessing the potential for clinically meaningful functions, such as tracking and monitoring change in health status, decision support, and prediction of health outcomes. Our findings should be considered in light of some limitations.

4.1. Limitations

Firstly, scoping reviews encompassing broad concepts that generate large numbers of citations may be prone to human error where investigators inadvertently miss relevant articles. Further, where there are multiple investigators performing screening, there is a risk of alternative interpretations of abstracts. To mitigate this, we commenced screening following independent review and group discussion of a common set of articles, before proceeding with screening in batches and regular check-ins to query any concerns, share ideas, reach consensus, and resolve any disputes as necessary. Second, for speed, only two investigators were involved in developing the initial data charting system. A wider group discussion could have generated additional elements for consideration at the outset. Nevertheless, ample opportunities were built into our process for implementing ideas, new concepts, and iterating the data extraction chart. Third, given the heterogeneity of the articles and intention to encompass studies focused on technical feasibility as well as original research, it was challenging to identify a universal tool to appraise the quality and validity of the studies. Finally, while we aimed to comprehensively categorize the wide variety of devices among these studies, as none of the investigators were technologists, there may have been some degree of error in taxonomy and classification, especially among the commercial- and research-grade wearable/sensors. This may have been further complicated by the proprietary names for the devices which could have varied by geographical region or changed as technologies evolved.
Through the process of our full-text review, we identified three spheres of insights: clinical, technological/data, and interpersonal spheres, with future scopes of work required to realize the translation of personalized digital technologies from the research bench to surgical care [10].

4.2. Clinical Sphere

Authors have categorized surgical applications of wearable technologies into providing augmentative functions (the provision of information in real time for surgeons during clinical or surgical encounters, e.g., head-up displays on glasses), assistive functions (the use of wearables to replace physical tasks, e.g., gesture control of electronic systems while scrubbed for surgery), and assessment functions (i.e., objective measurement of clinical outcomes and disease severity, e.g., tracking mobility data and walking tolerance in degenerative musculoskeletal conditions) [24]. Wearable technologies can overlap to varying extents among these functions and be positioned at differing points along the continuum of surgical centeredness versus patient centeredness [24].
In this scoping review, beyond studies demonstrating technical feasibility alone, most studies involved the assessment function—commonly tracking and monitoring of activity and biometric data. Fewer studies involved prediction, risk profiling, surgical optimization, diagnostic processes, development of new interventions and care delivery models, shared decision making, decision support and targeted treatment selection, and recovery and rehabilitation support, e.g., gamification [25]. Personal digital technologies capturing PGHD were most commonly applied in the context of orthopaedics and neurosurgery. Applications mostly involved wearable motion sensors in populations with chronic musculoskeletal conditions, such as advanced osteoarthritis requiring total joint replacement [26,27,28,29]. In the context of musculoskeletal health in general, activity/mobility data (from accelerometers and GPS), communication data (text and telephone logs, screen time), and self-reported pain (phone-based visual analogue surveys) have been used to predict outcomes of care for spinal conditions [30]. Further, mobility metrics (gait speed using accelerometer and gyroscope sensors) from wearable sensors have been associated with health outcomes, including activities of daily life in older adults [31].
Beyond surgery, the concept of digital phenotyping has been extensively applied in the mental health arena for objective continuous generation of data points representing activities, cognitions, and behaviors (e.g., self-evaluated mood, daily steps, call durations, text frequency, psychosocial PROMs) in the management of a conditions including depression, anxiety, bipolar disease, schizophrenia and monitoring suicidal risk [32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46].
Digital phenotyping has also captured recovery metrics and physical activity in non-operative spinal care [18], augmented neurological care [47,48], signaled cardiovascular risk [49], characterized loneliness and social isolation [49], and been used to develop behavioral change interventions [50]. In relation to the point of application along the surgical pathway, personal digital devices have established baseline function [51,52,53], enabled advanced monitoring of biometric data during the perioperative phase/acute recovery phase [54], and tracked progress during postoperative recovery [25].

Future Scope

While there are a wide range of clinical applications, directions for further work and surgical use cases involving digital phenotyping can be summarized as (i) enhanced recovery monitoring, (ii) improving decision making, and (iii) surgical optimization (including optimization/prehabilitation). Further studies are also needed to understand the ability of PGHD to segment patient populations during the care cycle without stigmatizing the individual, define postoperative recovery trajectories, and assess the association of passive PGHD with PROMs.
As PGHD commonly involves activity-related metrics, there seems a natural opportunity to expand this form of measurement in orthopaedics to assess the association with PROMs capturing physical function, especially considering the direct impact of common conditions, such as osteoarthritis and fractures, and interventions, such as total joint replacement surgery and fracture fixation, on physical activities and mobility.
In relation to psychometric evaluation (i.e., assessment of validity, reliability, responsiveness, reproducibility, feasibility and user-friendliness), the same level of rigor applied to testing PROMs should be applied to passive PGHD. Full scale adoption of this technology across different surgical settings also requires forecasting of barriers and pitfalls related to surgical quality and safety, alongside the ethical, privacy, and legal considerations related to the use of this technology [18,55].

4.3. Technological/Data Sphere

Personal digital technologies such as smartphones—mobile devices used for core phone functions (voice calls, text messaging) and computing functions (wider software, internet, e.g., web browsing, mobile broadband, and multi-media functionality, e.g., gaming, music, video, cameras)—and wearable sensors (wearables)—small electronic devices embedded into items possessing computational ability that interface with the body—are now ubiquitous across the consumer market [3,24].
We categorized the technologies in this review into smartphone (e.g., Apple iPhone algorithm), consumer-grade wearables (e.g., Fitbit, Apple Watch, Garmin, Microsoft Band, Samsung Gear, Xiaomi MiBand, Huawei Band), and research-grade wearables and sensors (e.g., SenseWear Armband, ActivPal Monitors, Stepwatch Activity Monitor, DynaPort ADL monitor, ActiGraph GT3x Activity Monitor). There were no studies involving sensors embedded into other personal items, e.g., clothing, accessories such as contact lenses, in this review [3,24].
A rapidly evolving combination of sensors, displays, processors and storage memory, and interconnected software and computer algorithms are accelerating the collection, filtering, processing, interpretation, and visualization of an individual’s interactions with their environment from raw data [24]. In this review, we map an array of these generated data points and categorize them into an “Activity-Biometrics-Communication framework of digital biomarkers” from personal digital devices (Figure 6). The fast pace of this evolution is being fueled by developments in advanced technologies such as artificial intelligence and machine learning (especially around anomaly detection), increasing analytic capabilities alongside advances in collection and processing power. Increase in technical development has been matched by the explosion of scientific work in this field over the last twenty years. This growth may in part be due to the fast-paced release of wearable technologies in the health and fitness consumer market: FitBit releasing their first activity tracker and wearable technologies in 2014; Apple releasing the AppleWatch in 2015; and Garmin releasing the Forerunner 101 back in 2003.
Interestingly, the majority of studies in this review utilized research-grade technologies, despite most of the development, distribution, and sales occurring in the commercial sector. This raises questions around the availability, translation, and scalability of technologies developed and tested at the research bench, and whether such devices serve as appropriate benchmarks for testing commercial-grade devices. In contrast, the proprietary nature of the technology behind commercial-grade devices also warrants further discussion around standardization and scalability. How can health care professionals be sure that the summary statistics from different devices are measuring the same health domain? The heterogeneity throughout PGHD methodology provides a major challenge for scaling solutions.

Future Scope

Further work is needed around a data infrastructure and defining platforms necessary to support multiple forms of PGHD. The development of Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR), smart marker capabilities, and application programming interfaces (APIs) by the clinical informatics community should support the interoperability of personal digital technologies and applications in existing IT infrastructures as they become standardized within care pathways.
Infrastructure also depends on standardization of this technology, including the validation, testing, refinement, and standardizing the algorithms behind personal digital devices. The issue of standardization is particularly relevant when considering health domains derived from proprietary mathematical models, such as sleep quality. Greater clarity is needed around whether the raw data aligns with the processed data and whether these metrics are measuring what they claim to represent.
Validation of this technology should also include active PGHD, such as PROMs, and understanding the extent to which patient-reported outcomes can and/or should be used as comparators and benchmarks for passive PGHD. Extensive cycles of testing are needed to establish whether passive PGHD from personal digital devices can one day be used as standalone measures of health outcomes or be used side by side with active measurements.
Robust and transparent set of IT governance standards are required to optimize interoperability and reproducibility. In a broader sense, a strategic approach is needed to contend with the rate of technological advancement versus rate of adoption in existing health care settings. Further work should also evaluate the challenges around distribution, access to technology and costs.

4.4. Interpersonal Sphere

While digital phenotyping provides a rich source of PGHD to support the optimal delivery of surgical care, the nature of data captured using personal digital technologies (e.g., how many texts they wrote or how long they spent talking to friends and family; how long they took in moving from place to place); may further humanize the interaction between patients and clinicians [11,12,56]. This interaction contrasts with legacy electronic health record (EHR) systems and systems actively collecting PROMs (via in-person, digital and telephone assessment), that have led to patient and physician burden, burnout, inefficiencies, and distance between patients and providers.
A key aspect of humanizing the technology behind digital phenotyping requires an exploration of patient and professional perspectives around its acceptability, including sensitives and stigmas that may be associated with this form of data. Further, we need to understand how patients and professionals think and act in response to active and passive data capture, feedback, and visualization of metrics in relation to an individual’s condition. Interestingly, early work assessing personal digital data in the mental health arena has shown most patients (in outpatient settings) are happy to share social media and passive smartphone data [20,57]. In contrast, authors have also shown populations have been very apprehensive about actively reporting data summaries from their wearables with concerns around data privacy [18,58].

Future Scope

Further work is needed in surgical settings around the willingness of patients to have their personal passive data shared and utilized for their care [57]. Studies should also investigate the influence of this exposure on performance metrics and outcomes, as well as the way this data shapes the relationship with clinicians [15,59]. The aspect of data overload and data fatigue for clinicians should also be explored. When it comes to multi-disciplinary care and care spanning primary and secondary care, we should aim to define ownership and responsibility for the data.
The successful adoption of digital phenotyping requires an interdisciplinary approach involving co-collaboration and co-development of innovations between stakeholders in health care and digital health (patients and families, health care professionals, medical device industry, researchers, designers, technologists, bioengineers and scientists).
Future work should also explore considerations for integrating PGHD and digital phenotyping into existing patient pathways within and outside the walls of hospitals and clinics. The minimum level of technology required to integrate this technology should be defined alongside an understanding of the relative advantages of data generated for health systems at the clinical, institutional, network, and policy level.

5. Conclusions

Widescale adoption and use of smartphone and wearable technologies in the consumer and surgical health care sector has sparked opportunities to provide a digital phenotype for patients that aims to reflect their physical ability, cognition, social interaction and behavior in free-living settings. Active and passive data generated from sensors within these devices provide a nuanced view of patient outcomes for surgical conditions both alone and in combination with other data elements. While the ubiquity of such personal digital devices across society averts the need to introduce further technology, substantial further work is needed in relation to technological (data collection and analysis), clinical (standardized integration into workflows) and interpersonal (impact on patient–professional relationship) spheres of research and development. As technological, clinical, and interpersonal considerations unfold in this fast-moving space, more sophisticated ways of modelling themes, such as natural language processing of scientific and technical resources, can be used to better understand these elements [60,61]. Digital phenotyping offers an advanced understanding of human behavior and promises to drive objective, scalable, time sensitive, cost-effective, and reproducible digital outcome measurement for improving routine surgical care.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, P.J., E.L., V.G., I.V.; methodology, P.J., E.L., V.G.; software, E.L., I.V.; validation, P.J., A.B.H.; formal analysis, E.L., I.V.; investigation, P.J., E.L., V.G., A.J.M.; resources, E.L., I.V.; data curation, E.L., V.G., A.J.M., I.V.; writing—original draft preparation, P.J., E.L., A.B.H.; writing—review and editing, P.J., E.L., V.G., I.V., A.B.H., N.P.; visualization, E.L., V.G.; supervision, P.J., A.B.H.; project administration, P.J.; funding acquisition, none. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. PRISMA-Scoping Review (ScR) Checklist Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) Checklist.
Table A1. PRISMA-Scoping Review (ScR) Checklist Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) Checklist.
SECTI.ONITEMPRISMA-ScR CHECKLIST ITEMREPORTED ON PAGE
TITLE
Title1Identify the report as a scoping review.1
ABSTRACT
Structured summary2Provide a structured summary that includes (as applicable): background, objectives, eligibility criteria, sources of evidence, charting methods, results, and conclusions that relate to the review questions and objectives.2
INTRODUCTION
Rationale3Describe the rationale for the review in the context of what is already known. Explain why the review questions/objectives lend themselves to a scoping review approach.3
Objectives4Provide an explicit statement of the questions and objectives being addressed with reference to their key elements (e.g., population or participants, concepts, and context) or other relevant key elements used to conceptualize the review questions and/or objectives.3
METHODS
Protocol and registration5Indicate whether a review protocol exists; state if and where it can be accessed (e.g., a Web address); and if available, provide registration information, including the registration number.4
Eligibility criteria6Specify characteristics of the sources of evidence used as eligibility criteria (e.g., years considered, language, and publication status), and provide a rationale.4
Information sources7Describe all information sources in the search (e.g., databases with dates of coverage and contact with authors to identify additional sources), as well as the date the most recent search was executed.4
Search8Present the full electronic search strategy for at least one database, including any limits used, such that it could be repeated.4; Appendix B
Selection of sources of evidence9State the process for selecting sources of evidence (i.e., screening and eligibility) included in the scoping review.4
Data charting process10Describe the methods of charting data from the included sources of evidence (e.g., calibrated forms or forms that have been tested by the team before their use, and whether data charting was done independently or in duplicate) and any processes for obtaining and confirming data from investigators.5
Data items11List and define all variables for which data were sought and any assumptions and simplifications made.5
Critical appraisal of individual sources of evidence12If done, provide a rationale for conducting a critical appraisal of included sources of evidence; describe the methods used and how this information was used in any data synthesis (if appropriate).n/a; Comment on page 5.
Synthesis of results13Describe the methods of handling and summarizing the data that were charted.6
RESULTS
Selection of sources of evidence14Give numbers of sources of evidence screened, assessed for eligibility, and included in the review, with reasons for exclusions at each stage, ideally using a flow diagram.6
Characteristics of sources of evidence15For each source of evidence, present characteristics for which data were charted and provide the citations.6
Critical appraisal within sources of evidence16If done, present data on critical appraisal of included sources of evidence (see item 12).n/a
Results of individual sources of evidence17For each included source of evidence, present the relevant data that were charted that relate to the review questions and objectives.6,7
Synthesis of results18Summarize and/or present the charting results as they relate to the review questions and objectives.6,7
DISCUSSION
Summary of evidence19Summarize the main results (including an overview of concepts, themes, and types of evidence available), link to the review questions and objectives, and consider the relevance to key groups.7–11
Limitations20Discuss the limitations of the scoping review process.7
Conclusions21Provide a general interpretation of the results with respect to the review questions and objectives, as well as potential implications and/or next steps.11
FUNDING
Funding22Describe sources of funding for the included sources of evidence, as well as sources of funding for the scoping review. Describe the role of the funders of the scoping review.11
JBI = Joanna Briggs Institute; PRISMA-ScR = Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews.

Appendix B

Appendix B. Search strategy for PubMed involving terms related to “digital phenotyping and PGHD” (concept A), “outcome measurement” (concept B), and “surgical care” (concept C)
(“Digital phenotyp*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable device*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable motions sensor*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable motion sensor*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable motion sensing”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable sensor*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable camera*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable technolog*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable electronic device*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable activity monitor*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable activity track*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable activity device*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearablesensor technolog*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable tracking system*”[Title/Abstract] OR Pedometer*[Title/Abstract] OR “Inertial motion sensor*” [Title/Abstract] OR “Sensor technolog*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Home sensing technolog*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Mobile health technolog*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Mobile technolog*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Activity monitor*”[Title/Abstract] OR Electrogoniomet*[Title/Abstract] OR “Strain gauges based sensor*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Textile piezoresistive sensor*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wrist-worn activity monitor*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Activity-tracking wristband*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Activity tracker wristband*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Fitness tracker*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Fitness tracking”[Title/Abstract] OR “Commercial activity tracker*”[Title/Abstract] OR Fitbit*[Title/Abstract] OR “Apple watch*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Smart phone*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Smart device*”[Title/Abstract] OR Smartphone*[Title/Abstract] OR “Smartphone sensor*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Smartphone acceleromet*”[Title/Abstract]OR “Embedded sensor*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Personal digital device*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Digital device”[Title/Abstract] OR “Tracking device*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Human motion tracking system*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wireless sensor*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Inertial sensor*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Inertial navigation system*”[Title/Abstract] OR Garmen[Title/Abstract] OR “GPS system*”[Title/Abstract] OR “Wearable Electronic Devices”[Mesh:NoExp] OR “Smartphone”[Mesh] OR “Fitness Trackers”[Mesh])
AND
(“Outcome Assessment, Health Care”[Mesh] OR “Patient Outcome Assessment”[Mesh] OR “Patient Reported Outcome Measures”[Mesh] OR “Patient Satisfaction”[Mesh] OR “Program Evaluation”[Mesh] OR “Process Assessment, Health Care”[Mesh] OR “Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care”[Mesh] OR “Treatment Outcome”[Mesh] OR “Recovery of Function”[Mesh] OR “Patient Readmission”[Mesh] OR “Patient Discharge”[Mesh] OR “Self Care”[Mesh] OR “Patient Compliance”[Mesh] OR “Medication Adherence”[Mesh] OR “Quality of Life”[Mesh] OR “Fatal Outcome”[Mesh] OR “Activities of Daily Living”[Mesh] OR “Patient Acceptance of Health Care”[Mesh] OR “Treatment Adherence and Compliance”[Mesh] OR “Treatment Refusal”[Mesh] OR Outcome[Title/Abstract] OR outcomes[Title/Abstract] OR “Patient experience”[Title/Abstract] OR “Patient satisfaction”[Title/Abstract] OR “Patient expectation”[Title/Abstract] OR “Patient expectations”[Title/Abstract] OR “Process evaluation”[Title/Abstract] OR “Process assessment”[Title/Abstract] OR “Process measure”[Title/Abstract] OR “Process measurement”[Title/Abstract] OR “Program evaluation”[Title/Abstract] OR “Program assessment”[Title/Abstract] OR “Patient reported experience”[Title/Abstract] OR “Impact on patient”[Title/Abstract] OR “Surgical outcome”[Title/Abstract] OR “surgical outcomes”[Title/Abstract] OR “Financial cost”[Title/Abstract] OR “Economic impact”[Title/Abstract] OR “Economics”[Title/Abstract] OR “costs”[Title/Abstract] OR “Healthcare cost”[Title/Abstract] OR “Length of stay”[Title/Abstract] OR “Patient discharge”[Title/Abstract] OR “Complications”[Title/Abstract] OR “Readmission”[Title/Abstract] OR “readmissions”[Title/Abstract] OR “Emergency department visit”[Title/Abstract] OR “ED visit”[Title/Abstract] OR “Postoperative hospital visit”[Title/Abstract] OR “Postoperative care”[Title/Abstract] OR “Recovery”[Title/Abstract] OR “Self-management”[Title/Abstract] OR “Self-care”[Title/Abstract] OR “Self care”[Title/Abstract] OR “Treatment adherence”[Title/Abstract] OR “Medication adherence”[Title/Abstract] OR “Non-adherence”[Title/Abstract] OR “Follow-up visit”[Title/Abstract] OR “Post-surgical visit”[Title/Abstract] OR “Compliance”[Title/Abstract] OR “Non-compliance”[Title/Abstract] OR “Fear”[Title/Abstract] OR “Quality of life”[Title/Abstract] OR “Clinical effectiveness”[Title/Abstract] OR “Treatment effectiveness”[Title/Abstract] OR “Treatment efficacy”[Title/Abstract] OR “Clinical efficacy”[Title/Abstract] OR “Activities of Daily Living”[Title/Abstract])
AND
(Surger*[Title/Abstract] OR surgical[Title/Abstract] OR surgeon*[Title/Abstract] OR Operate[Title/Abstract] OR operative[Title/Abstract] OR operation[Title/Abstract] OR Gynecolog*[Title/Abstract] OR Neurosurg*[Title/Abstract] OR Obstetric*[Title/Abstract] OR Ophthalmolog*[Title/Abstract] OR Orthopedic*[Title/Abstract] OR orthopaedic*[Title/Abstract] OR Otolaryngolog*[Title/Abstract] OR Neurotolog*[Title/Abstract] OR Traumatolog*[Title/Abstract] OR Urolog*[Title/Abstract] OR Abdominoplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Ablation[Title/Abstract] OR Abortion[Title/Abstract] OR Acetabuloplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Acetabuloplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Adenoidectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Adrenalectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Amputation[Title/Abstract] OR Anastomosis[Title/Abstract] OR Apicoectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Appendectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Arthrodesis[Title/Abstract] OR Arthroplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Arthroscopy[Title/Abstract] OR “Biliopancreatic Diversion” [Title/Abstract] OR Biopsy[Title/Abstract] OR “Blalock-Taussig procedure”[Title/Abstract]OR Blepharoplasty[Title/Abstract] OR “Bone Lengthening” [Title/Abstract] OR Bypass[Title/Abstract] OR Castration[Title/Abstract] OR Cautery[Title/Abstract] OR Cementoplasty[Title/Abstract] OR “Cervical Cerclage”[Title/Abstract] OR “Cerebral Decortication”[Title/Abstract] OR “Cerebral Revascularization”[Title/Abstract] OR
Cervicoplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Cholecystostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Choledochostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Circumcision[Title/Abstract] OR Colectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Colposcopy[Title/Abstract] OR Colpotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Conization[Title/Abstract] OR Craniotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Cryosurgery[Title/Abstract] OR Culdoscopy[Title/Abstract] OR Curettage[Title/Abstract] OR Cystostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Dacryocystorhinostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Debridement[Title/Abstract] OR Decompression[Title/Abstract] OR “Obstetric delivery”[Title/Abstract] OR Denervation[Title/Abstract] OR Dilatation[Title/Abstract] OR Diskectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Dissection[Title/Abstract] OR Electrosurgery[Title/Abstract] OR Endoscopy[Title/Abstract] OR “Endovascular Procedures”[Title/Abstract] OR Enterostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Esophagectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Esophagoplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Esophagostomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Eye Enucleation”[Title/Abstract] OR “Eye visceration”[Title/Abstract] OR Fasciotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Fetoscopy[Title/Abstract] OR Foraminotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Fracture Fixation[Title/Abstract] OR Fundoplication[Title/Abstract] OR Gastrectomy [Title/Abstract] OR Gastroenterostomy[Title/Abstract] ORGastropexy[Title/Abstract] OR Gastroplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Gastrostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Gingivectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Gingivoplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Glossectomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Guided Tissue Regeneration”[Title/Abstract] OR “Heller Myotomy”[Title/Abstract] OR Hemofiltration[Title/Abstract] OR Hemoperfusion[Title/Abstract] OR Hemorrhoidectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Hepatectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Herniorrhaphy[Title/Abstract] OR Hypophysectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Hysteroscopy[Title/Abstract] OR Hysterotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Implantation[Title/Abstract] OR Iridectomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Jaw Fixation”[Title/Abstract] OR Keratectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Laminectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Laminoplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Laparotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Laryngectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Laryngoplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Laryngoscopy[Title/Abstract] OR “Laser Therapy”[Title/Abstract] OR Ligation[Title/Abstract] OR “Light Coagulation”[Title/Abstract] OR “Limb Salvage”[Title/Abstract] OR Lipectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Lithotripsy[Title/Abstract] OR Lobectomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Lymph Node Excision”[Title/Abstract] OR Mammaplasty[Title/Abstract] OR “Mandibular Advancement”[Title/Abstract] OR Mastectomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Maxillofacial Prosthesis Implantation”[Title/Abstract] OR Mediastinoscopy[Title/Abstract] OR Meniscectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Metastasectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Microsurgery[Title/Abstract] OR “Middle Ear Ventilation”[Title/Abstract] OR Mohs[Title/Abstract] OR Morcellation[Title/Abstract] OR Myotomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Percutaneous Nephrostomy”[Title/Abstract] OR Neuroendoscopy[Title/Abstract] OR “Ophthalmologic Orbit Evisceration”[Title/Abstract] OR “Orthopedic Procedures”[Title/Abstract] OR “Ossicular Replacement”[Title/Abstract] OR Osteotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Ostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Pallidotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Pancreaticoduodenectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Pancreaticojejunostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Paracentesis[Title/Abstract] OR Parathyroidectomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Pelvic Exenteration”[Title/Abstract] OR Phacoemulsification[Title/Abstract] OR Pharyngectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Pharyngostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Photopheresis[Title/Abstract] OR Piezosurgery[Title/Abstract] OR Pinealectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Pneumonectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Portoenterostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Proctectomy [Title/Abstract] OR Psychosurgery[Title/Abstract] OR Pyloromyotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Reconstruction[Title/Abstract] OR Reperfusion[Title/Abstract] OR Replantation[Title/Abstract] OR Resection[Title/Abstract] OR Rhinoplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Salpingostomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Scleral Buckling”[Title/Abstract] OR Scleroplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Sclerostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Shunt[Title/Abstract] OR “Sinus Floor Augmentation”[Title/Abstract] OR Sphincterotomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Spinal Puncture”[Title/Abstract] OR Splenectomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Split-Brain
Procedure”[Title/Abstract] OR “Stereotaxic Techniques”[Title/Abstract] OR “Reproductive Sterilization”[Title/Abstract] OR Sternotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Symphysiotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Synovectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Tendon Transfer[Title/Abstract] OR Tenodesis[Title/Abstract] OR Tenotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Thoracoplasty[Title/Abstract] OR Thoracoscopy [Title/Abstract] OR Thoracostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Thoracotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Thymectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Thyroidectomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Tissue Expansion”[Title/Abstract] OR Tonsillectomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Tooth Extraction”[Title/Abstract] OR “Tooth Replantation”[Title/Abstract] OR Tracheostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Tracheotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Tracheotomy[Title/Abstract] OR Traction[Title/Abstract] OR Transplant[Title/Abstract] OR Transplantation[Title/Abstract] OR “Ulnar Collateral Ligament Reconstruction”[Title/Abstract] OR Ultrafiltration[Title/Abstract] OR Ureterostomy[Title/Abstract] OR vasectomy[Title/Abstract] OR Vasovasostomy[Title/Abstract] OR Vitrectomy[Title/Abstract] OR “Surgical Procedures, Operative”[Mesh] OR “Specialties, Surgical”[Mesh] OR “Surgeons”[Mesh])

Appendix C

Table A2. Final Study Set including study characteristics, clinical characteristics, technology/data characteristics and functional characteristics.
Table A2. Final Study Set including study characteristics, clinical characteristics, technology/data characteristics and functional characteristics.
TitleAuthorYearCountryStudy DesignSurgical SpecialtyPathway PhaseTechnology TypeData TypeFunction
Physical activity monitors can be successfully implemented to assess Perioperative activity in urologic surgeryAgarwal, D. K., et al.2018USAFeasibility/ValidityUrologicPre, PostCGWActivityF
Reliability of Physical Activity Measures During Free-Living Activities in People After Total Knee ArthroplastyAlmeida, G. J., et al.2016USAFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM, O
Responsiveness of Physical Activity Measures Following Exercise Programs after Total Knee ArthroplastyAlmeida, G. J., et al.2017USAFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityO
Validity of physical activity measures in individuals after total knee arthroplastyAlmeida, G. J., et al.2015USAFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityF
Kinematic and clinical evaluation of shoulder function after primary and revision reverse shoulder prosthesesAlta, T. D., et al.2011NetherlandsOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
The active and passive kinematic difference between primary reverse and total shoulder prosthesesAlta, T. D., et al.2014NetherlandsOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsO
Long-term clinical evaluation of the automatic stance-phase lock-controlled prosthetic knee joint in young adults with unilateral above-knee AmputationAndrysek, J., et al.2017CanadaOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Mobile Phone-Connected Wearable Motion Sensors to Assess Postoperative MobilizationAppelboom, G., et al.2015USAOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPostCGWActivityF
Monitoring activity of hip injury patients (MoHIP): a sub-study of the World Hip Trauma Evaluation observational cohort studyArmitage, L. C., et al.2020UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityTM
High Plantar Force Loading After Achilles Tendon Rupture Repair with Early Functional MobilizationAufwerber, S., et al.2019SwedenOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityP
Psychological factors are associated with return to Pre-injury levels of sport and physical activity after ACL reconstructionBaez, S. E., et al.2020USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityTM
Feasibility of low-cost accelerometers in measuring functional recovery after major oncologic surgeryBarkley, R., et al.2019USAFeasibility/ValiditySurgical OncologyPre, PostCGWActivityF
Assessment of a SP app (Capstesia) for measuring pulse Pressure variation: agreement between two methods: A Cross-sectional studyBarrachina, B., et al.2017SpainFeasibility/ValidityGeneral SurgeryPeriSPBiometricsF
Physical Activity, Quality of Life and Body Image of Candidates to Bariatric SurgeryBarreto, B. L. M., et al.2018BrazilOriginal ProspectiveBariatricPostCGWActivityO
Cementless THA for the treatment of osteonecrosis at 10-year follow-up: have we improved compared to cemented THA?Bedard, N. A., et al.2013USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM
Functional outcome analysis of operatively treated malleolar fracturesBelcher, G. L., et al.1997USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityTM
Changes in prospectively collected longitudinal patient-generated health data are associated with short-term patient-reported outcomes after total joint arthroplasty: a pilot studyBendich, I., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityRP
Activity levels and polyethylene wear of patients 10 years Post hip replacementBennett, D., et al.2008UKOriginal Cross-sectionalOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityRP
Geriatric rehabilitation after hip fracture. Role of body-fixed sensor measurements of physical activityBenzinger, P., et al.2014GermanyOriginal Cross-sectionalOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityF
Postoperative quality-of-life assessment in patients with spine metastases treated with long-segment pedicle-screw fixationBernard, F., et al.2017FranceOriginal RetrospectiveNeurosurgeryPostCGWActivityTM
What are the functional outcomes of endoprosthestic reconstructions after tumor resection?Bernthal, N. M., et al.2015USAOriginal ProspectiveSurgical OncologyPostRGWActivity, BiometricsP
Pervasive wearable device for free tissue transfer monitoring based on advanced data analysis: clinical study reportBerthelot, M., et al.2019UKOriginal ProspectiveBreastPeriRGWBiometricsF
Machine Learning Algorithms Can Use Wearable Sensor Data to Accurately Predict Six-Week Patient-Reported Outcome Scores Following Joint Replacement in a Prospective TrialBini, S. A., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivity, BiometricsP
Monitoring of Postoperative Bone Healing Using Smart Trauma-Fixation Device with Integrated Self-Powered Piezo-Floating-Gate SensorsBorchani, W., et al.2015USAFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsF
Cross-sectional assessment of daily physical activity in chronic obstructive Pulmonary disease lung transplant patientsBossenbroek, L., et al.2009NetherlandsOriginal Cross-sectionalTransplantPostCGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Changes in physical activity and health-related quality of life during the first year after total knee arthroplastyBrandes, M., et al.2011GermanyOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Quantity versus quality of gait and quality of life in patients with osteoarthritisBrandes, M., et al.2008GermanyOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivity, BiometricsF
Impact of a tailored activity counselling intervention during inpatient rehabilitation after knee and hip arthroplasty—an explorative RCTBrandes, M., et al.2018GermanyOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityO
Reliability of wireless monitoring using a wearable patch sensor in high-risk surgical patients at a step-down unit in the Netherlands: a clinical validation studyBreteler, M. J.M. M., et al.2018NetherlandsOriginal ProspectiveGeneral SurgeryPostRGWActivity, BiometricsF
Are current wireless monitoring systems capable of detecting adverse events in high-risk surgical patients? A descriptive studyBreteler, M. J. M., et al.2020NetherlandsOriginal Cross-sectionalGeneral SurgeryPostRGWBiometricsF
Vital Signs Monitoring with Wearable Sensors in High-risk Surgical Patients: A Clinical Validation StudyBreteler, M. J. M., et al.2020NetherlandsOriginal Cross-sectionalGeneral SurgeryPostRGWBiometricsTM
Novel positioning sensor with real-time feedback for improved Postoperative positioning: pilot study in control subjectsBrodie, F. L., et al.2017USAOriginal ProspectiveOphthalmologyPeriCGWBiometricsF
Validity and reliability of measurements obtained with an “activity monitor” in people with and without a transtibial AmputationBussmann, H. B., et al.1998NetherlandsFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivity, BiometricsF
Validity of the prosthetic activity monitor to assess the duration and spatio-temporal characteristics of prosthetic walkingBussmann, J. B., et al.2004NetherlandsFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsF
Ambulatory accelerometry to quantify motor behaviour in patients after failed back surgery: a validation studyBussmann, J. B., et al.1998NetherlandsFeasibility/ValidityNeurosurgeryPostRGWActivity, BiometricsF
Inertial Sensor-Based Gait and Attractor Analysis as Clinical Measurement Tool: Functionality and Sensitivity in Healthy Subjects and Patients with Symptomatic Lumbar Spinal StenosisByrnes, S. K., et al.2018SwitzerlandFeasibility/ValidityNeurosurgeryPostRGWBiometricsO
Cardiac Surgery Rehabilitation System (CSRS) for a Personalized Support to PatientsCaggianese, G., et al.2017ItalyOriginal ProspectiveCardiothoracicPostCGWActivityTM
Clinical evaluation of a mobile sensor-based gait analysis method for outcome measurement after knee arthroplastyCalliess, T., et al.2014GermanyFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivity, BiometricsF
Higher pyruvate levels after Achilles tendon rupture surgery could be used as a prognostic biomarker of an improved patient outcomeCapone, G., et al.2020SwedenOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityP
Wearable Technology-A Pilot Study to Define “Normal” Postoperative Recovery TrajectoriesCarmichael, H., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveGeneral SurgeryPre, PostCGWActivityTM
Patterns of physical activity and sedentary behavior after Bariatric: an observational studyChapman, N., et al.2014AustraliaOriginal ProspectiveBariatricPostRGWActivity, BiometricsO
Data Collection and Analysis Using Wearable Sensors for Monitoring Knee Range of Motion after Total Knee ArthroplastyChiang, C. Y., et al.2017TaiwanOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityF
Feasibility and Preliminary Outcomes of a Physical Therapist-Administered Physical Activity Intervention After Total Knee ReplacementChristiansen, M. B., et al.2019USAFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityF
An Assessment of Physical Activity Data Collected via a Smartphone App and a Smart Band in Breast Cancer Survivors: Observational StudyChung, I. Y., et al.2019South koreaOriginal ProspectiveSurgical OncologyPostSP, CGWActivity, BiometricsF
Inertial sensor-based measures of gait symmetry and repeatability in people with unilateral lower limb AmputationClemens, S., et al.2020USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM
Use of a wrist-mounted device for continuous outpatient physiologic monitoring after transsphenoidal surgery: a pilot studyCole, T. S., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveOromaxillofacialPostCGWActivity, BiometricsF
Understanding the Capacity for Exercise in Post-Bariatric PatientsColeman, K. J., et al.2017USAOriginal ProspectiveBariatricPostCGWActivityF, TM
A multicomponent intervention to decrease sedentary time during hospitalization: a quasi-exPerimental pilot studyConijn, D., et al.2020NetherlandsOriginal ProspectiveVascular, TransplantationPostCGWActivityF
Digital Phenotyping in Patients with Spine Disease: A Novel Approach to Quantifying Mobility and Quality of LifeCote, D. J., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPostSPActivity, CommunicationTM
Late effects of a brief psychological intervention in patients with intermittent claudication in a randomized clinical trialCunningham, M. A., et al.2013AustraliaOriginal ProspectiveVascularPostUnknownActivityP
Daily Physical Activity in Total Hip Arthroplasty Patients Undergoing Different Surgical Approaches A Cohort StudyEngdal, M., et al.2017NorwayOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Validation of the Fitbit Flex in an Acute Post-Cardiac Surgery Patient PopulationDaligadu, J., et al.2018CanadaFeasibility/ValidityCardiothoracicPostCGWActivityF
Association of Wearable Activity Monitors with Assessment of Daily Ambulation and Length of Stay Among Patients Undergoing Major SurgeryDaskivich, T. J., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveCardiothoracic, General Surgery, BariatricPostCGWActivityF
Are patients with knee osteoarthritis and patients with knee joint replacement as physically active as healthy persons?Daugaard, R., et al.2018DenmarkOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityTM
Physical Activity Levels During Acute Inpatient Admission After Hip Fracture are Very LowDavenport, S. J., et al.2014AustraliaOriginal Cross-sectionalOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Feasibility of real-time location systems in monitoring recovery after major abdominal surgeryDorrell, R. D., et al.2017USAOriginal ProspectiveGeneral SurgeryPostRGWActivityTM
Continuous Versus Intermittent Vital Signs Monitoring Using a Wearable, Wireless Patch in Patients Admitted to Surgical Wards: Pilot Cluster Randomized Controlled TrialDowney, C., et al.2018UKFeasibility/ValidityGeneral SurgeryPostRGWBiometricsF
Distribution of arm velocity and frequency of arm usage during daily activity: objective outcome evaluation after shoulder surgeryDuc, C., et al.2013SwitzerlandFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
Objective evaluation of cervical spine mobility after surgery during free-living activityDuc, C., et al.2013BelgiumFeasibility/ValidityNeurosurgeryPostRGWBiometricsTM
Ambulation monitoring of transtibial Amputation subjects with patient activity monitor versus pedometerDudek, N. L., et al.2008CanadaFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityF
Evaluating patients’ walking capacity during hospitalization for lung cancer resectionEsteban, P. A., et al.2017SpainOriginal Cross-sectionalCardiothoracicPostCGWActivityTM
Activity and socket wear in the Charnley low-friction arthroplastyFeller, J. A., et al.1994AustraliaOriginal RetrospectiveOrthopaedicsPostUnknownActivityTM
Physical activity monitoring: a responsive and meaningful patient-centered outcome for surgery, chemotherapy, or radiotherapy?Ferriolli, E., et al.2012UKOriginal Cross-sectionalGeneral SurgeryPostRGWActivityF
A feasibility study of an unsupervised, Pre-operative exercise program for adults with lung cancerFinley, D. J., et al.2020USAFeasibility/ValidityCardiothoracicPreCGWActivity, BiometricsF
Differences in Preferred walking speeds in a gait laboratory compared with the real world after total hip replacementFoucher, K. C., et al.2010USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM
Pilot study of methods to document quantity and variation of independent patient exercise and activity after total knee arthroplastyFranklin, P. D., et al.2006USAFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityF, TM
Improvements in Objectively Measured Activity Behaviors Do Not Correlate with Improvements in Patient-Reported Outcome Measures Following Total Knee ArthroplastyFrimpong, E., et al.2020South AfricaOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivityP
Prospective study of physical activity and quality of life in Japanese women undergoing total hip arthroplastyFujita, K., et al.2013JapanOriginal Cross-sectionalOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivityTM
Effects of cycle ergometer use in early mobilization following cardiac surgery: a randomized controlled trialGama Lordello, G. G., et al.2020BrazilOriginal ProspectiveCardiothoracicPostCGWActivityP
Enhancing patient mobility following cesarean-delivery—the efficacy of an improved Postpartum protocol assessed with pedometersGaner Herman, H., et al.2020IsraelOriginal ProspectiveObstetrics/GynecologyPostCGWActivityP
Assessment and Post-Intervention recovery following surgery for Lumbar Disc Herniation based on objective gait metrics from wearable devices using the Gait Posture index: GPi™Ghent, F., et al.2020AustraliaFeasibility/ValidityNeurosurgeryPre, PostCGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Physical activity patterns of patients immediately after lumbar surgeryGilmore, S. J., et al.2019AustraliaOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPostRGWActivityP
Assessing the utility of an IoS application in the Perioperative care of spine surgery patients: the NeuroPath Pilot studyGlauser, G., et al.2019USAFeasibility/ValidityNeurosurgeryPre, PostSPActivity, CommunicationF
A Step in the Right Direction: Body Location Determines Activity Tracking Device Accuracy in Total Knee and Hip Arthroplasty PatientsGoel, R., et al.2020USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWBiometricsTM
Comparative study of the activity of total hip arthroplasty patients and normal subjectsGoldsmith, A. A., et al.2001UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityTM
CAPACITY: A physical activity self-management program for patients undergoing surgery for lung cancer, a phase I feasibility studyGranger, C. L., et al.2018AustraliaOriginal ProspectiveCardiothoracicPre, PostCGWActivityF
Accelerometery as a measure of modifiable physical activity in high-risk elderly Preoperative patients: a prospective observational pilot studyGrimes, L., et al.2019UKOriginal ProspectiveGeneral SurgeryPreCGWActivityF, TM
Does the Femoral Head Size in Hip Arthroplasty Influence Lower Body Movements during Squats, Gait and Stair Walking? A Clinical Pilot Study Based on Wearable Motion SensorsGrip, H., et al.2019SwedenFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivity, BiometricsF
Assessment of objective ambulation in lower extremity sarcoma patients with a continuous activity monitor: rationale and validationGundle, K. R., et al.2014USAFeasibility/ValiditySurgical OncologyPostRGWActivityF
Remote Gait Analysis Using Wearable Sensors Detects Asymmetric Gait Patterns in Patients Recovering from ACL ReconstructionGurchiek, R. D., et al.2019USAOriginal Cross-sectionalOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsF
Open-Source Remote Gait Analysis: A Post-Surgery Patient Monitoring ApplicationGurchiek, R. D., et al.2019USAFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostSP, RGWActivity, BiometricsF
Physical performance and self-report outcomes associated with use of passive, adaptive, and active prosthetic knees in persons with unilateral, transfemoral Amputation: Randomized crossover trialHafner, B. J. and R. L. Askew2015USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM
Using MEMS-based inertial sensor with ankle foot orthosis for telerehabilitation and its clinical evaluation in brain injuries and total knee replacement patientsHan, S. L., et al.2016TaiwanFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityF
Do activity levels increase after total hip and knee arthroplasty?Harding, P., et al.2014AustraliaOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivityTM
Knee arthroplasty: a cross-sectional study assessing energy expenditure and activityHayes, D. A., et al.2011AustraliaOriginal Cross-sectionalOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivity, BiometricsP
Wearable Technology in the Perioperative Period: Predicting Risk of Postoperative Complications in Patients Undergoing Elective ColorectalHedrick, T. L., et al.2020USAOriginal ProspectiveColorectalPre, PostCGWActivityRP
Detecting Postural transitions: a robust wavelet-based approachHemmati, S. and E. Wade2016USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityF
Low validity of the Sensewear Pro3 activity monitor compared to indirect calorimetry during simulated free living in patients with osteoarthritis of the hipHermann, A., et al. (2014).2014DenmarkOriginal Cross-sectionalOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWBiometricsF
Clinical outcome and physical activity measured with StepWatch 3 (TM) Activity Monitor after minimally invasive total hip arthroplastyHoll, S., et al.2018GermanyOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivityTM
Interaction between physical activity and continuous-flow left ventricular assist device function in outpatientsHu, S.X., et al.2013AustraliaOriginal ProspectiveCardiothoracicPostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM, P
2009 Marshall Urist Young Investigator Award: how often do patients with high-flex total knee arthroplasty use high flexion?Huddleston, J. I., et al.2009USAOriginal Cross-sectionalOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM, P
Tri-axial accelerometer analysis techniques for evaluating functional use of the extremitiesHurd, W.J., et al.2013USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPreRGWActivityF
Patient-Reported and Objectively Measured Function Before and After Reverse Shoulder ArthroplastyHurd, W.J., et al.2018USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityF, TM
A Smart Assistance Solution for Remotely Monitoring the Orthopaedic Rehabilitation Process Using Wearable Technology: re.flex SystemIanculescu, M., et al.2019RomaniaFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityF
Physical activity patterns and function 3 months after arthroscopic partial meniscectomyIlich, S.S., et al.2012AustraliaOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPostRGWActivityTM
Objective evaluation of Postoperative changes in real-life activity levels in the Postoperative course of lumbar spinal surgery using wearable trackersInoue, M., et al.2020JapanOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPostRGWActivityTM
HipGuard: A Wearable Measurement System for Patients Recovering from a Hip OperationIso-Ketola, P., et al.2008FinlandFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsF
Upright Time and Sit-To-Stand Transition Progression After Total Hip Arthroplasty: An Inhospital Longitudinal StudyJeldi, A. J., et al.2016UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
Metal ion concentrations after metal-on-metal hip arthroplasty are not correlated with habitual physical activity levelsJelsma, J., et al.2019NetherlandsOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityP
Association of Daily Step Count with the Prolonged Air Leak in Thoracic Surgery PatientsKavurmaci, Ö., et al.2020TurkeyOriginal Cross-sectionalCardiothoracicPostUnknownActivityP
The Usefulness of a Wearable Device in Daily Physical Activity Monitoring for the Hospitalized Patients Undergoing Lumbar SurgeryKim, D. H., et al.2019South KoreaOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPostCGWActivity, BiometricsTM, P
Associations between physical activity and mental health among Bariatric surgical candidatesKing, W. C., et al.2013USAOriginal Cross-sectionalBariatricPreRGWActivityTM, RP, O
Seasonal Variation in Physical Activity among Preoperative Patients with Lung Cancer Determined Using a Wearable DeviceKong, S., et al.2020South KoreaOriginal Cross-sectionalCardiothoracicPreCGWActivityTM
Gamified 3D Orthopaedic Rehabilitation using Low Cost and Portable Inertial SensorsKontadakis, G., et al.2017GreeceFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityF
Relationship Between Physical Activity and Clinical Outcomes After ACL ReconstructionKuenze, C., et al.2019USAOriginal Cross-sectionalOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityF, TM
Gait Pattern Recognition Using a Smartwatch Assisting Postoperative PhysiotherapyKyritsis, A. I., et al.2019SwitzerlandOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWBiometricsF
Gait Recognition with Smart Devices Assisting Postoperative Rehabilitation in a Clinical SettingKyritsis, A. I., et al.2018SwitzerlandFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostCGWBiometricsF
Recovery of mobility after knee arthroplasty—Expected rates and influencing factorsLamb, S. E. and H. Frost2003UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
Physical activity is unrelated to cognitive performance in Pre-Bariatric patientsLangenberg, S., et al.2015GermanyOriginal ProspectiveBariatricPreRGWActivity, BiometricsRP, P, O
Physical activity in daily life 1 year after lung transplantationLanger, D., et al.2009BelgiumOriginal ProspectiveTransplantPostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Predicting physical activity recovery after hip and knee arthroplasty? A longitudinal cohort studyLebleu, J., et al.2019BelgiumOriginal Cross-sectionalOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityTM, P
iHandU: Towards the Validation of a Wrist Rigidity Estimation for Intraoperative DBS Electrode Position OptimizationLopes, E. M., et al.2019PortugalFeasibility/ValidityNeurosurgeryPeriRGWBiometricsF
Adherence to a pedometer-based physical activity intervention following kidney transplant and impact on metabolic parametersLorenz, E. C., et al.2015USAOriginal ProspectiveTransplantPostCGWActivityF, TM, P
Financial Incentives and Health Coaching to Improve Physical Activity Following Total Knee Replacement: A Randomized Controlled TrialLosina, E., et al.2018USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityF, TM, P
Fitbit step counts during inpatient recovery from cancer surgery as a Predictor of readmissionLow, C. A., et al.2017USAOriginal ProspectiveSurgical OncologyPostCGWActivityTM, RP
Is Activity Tracker-Measured Ambulation an Accurate and Reliable Determinant of Postoperative Quality of Recovery? A Prospective Cohort Validation StudyMassouh, F., et al.2019CanadaOriginal ProspectiveObstetrics/GynecologyPostCGWActivityF
Relationship between body mass index and activity in hip or knee arthroplasty patientsMcClung, C. D., et al.2000USAOriginal Cross-sectionalOrthopaedicsPostUnknownActivityTM, RP
Patient-Generated Actigraphy Data as a Novel Outcomes Instrument in Carpal Tunnel SyndromeMcMahon, H. A., et al.2020USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivity, BiometricsF
Use of the pedometer in the evaluation of the effects of rehabilitation treatment on deambulatory autonomy in patients with lower limb arthroplasty during hospital rehabilitation: long-term Postoperative outcomesMelchiorri, G., et al.2020ItalyOriginal Cross-sectionalOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityF, TM
Physical Function and Pre-Amputation Characteristics Explain Daily Step Count after Dysvascular AmputationMiller, M. J., et al.2019USAOriginal Cross-sectionalVascularPostRGWActivityF, TM, RP
Evaluation of respiratory status and mandibular movement after total temporomandibular joint replacement in patients with rheumatoid arthritisMishima, K., et al.2003JapanOriginal ProspectiveOromaxillofacialPre, PostRGWBiometricsF, TM
Real-Time Monitoring of Bone Fracture Recovery by Using Aware, Sensing, Smart, and Active Orthopedic DevicesMišić, D., et al.2018SerbiaFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsF
Proposed objective scoring algorithm for assessment and intervention recovery following surgery for lumbar spinal stenosis based on relevant gait metrics from wearable devices: the Gait Posture index (GPi)Mobbs, R. J., et al.2019AustraliaFeasibility/ValidityNeurosurgeryPostCGWActivity, BiometricsF, RP, P
Physical Activity Measured with Accelerometer and Self-Rated Disability in Lumbar Spine Surgery: A Prospective StudyMobbs, R. J., et al.2016AustraliaOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPre, PostCGWActivity, BiometricsF, TM, RP
Outcome of the modified Lapidus procedure for hallux valgus deformity during the first year following surgery: A prospective clinical and gait analysis studyMoerenhout, K., et al.2019SwitzerlandOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsF, TM
Physical Function, Quality of Life, and Energy Expenditure During Activities of Daily Living in Obese, Post-Bariatric, and Healthy SubjectsMonteiro, F., et al.2017BrazilOriginal ProspectiveBariatricPostRGWActivityF, TM, P
Towards a new Concept to the Neurological Recovery for Knee Stabilization after Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction Based on Surface Electrical StimulationMoreno, J. C., et al.2008SpainFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsF
Duration and frequency of every day activities in total hip patientsMorlock, M., et al.2001GermanyOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityF, TM
Physical performance in kidney transplanted patients: a study on desert trekkingMosconi, G., et al.2011ItalyOriginal ProspectiveTransplantPostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Identifying subgroups of community-dwelling older adults and their prospective associations with long-term knee osteoarthritis outcomesMunugoda, I. P., et al.2020AustraliaOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPreCGWActivityTM, RP, P
High-grade rotatory knee laxity may be Predictable in ACL injuriesMusahl, V., et al.2018USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPreRGWBiometricsRP, P
The effect of patella resurfacing in total knee arthroplasty on functional range of movement measured by flexible electrogoniometryMyles, C. M., et al.2006UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM, P
Knee joint functional range of movement prior to and following total knee arthroplasty measured using flexible electrogoniometryMyles, C. M., et al.2002UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWBiometricsTM
How Many Steps Per Day are Necessary to Prevent Postoperative Complications Following Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Surgeries for Malignancy?Nakajima, H., et al.2020JapanOriginal ProspectiveSurgical Oncology, General SurgeryPreRGWActivityRP
Assessment of Early Gait Recovery After Anterior Approach Compared to Posterior Approach Total Hip Arthroplasty: A Smartphone Accelerometer-Based StudyNelms, N. J., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostSPActivity, BiometricsRP
Value of the average basal daily walked distance measured using a pedometer to Predict maximum oxygen consumption per minute in patients undergoing lung resectionNovoa, N. M., et al.2011SpainOriginal ProspectiveCardiothoracicPre, PostCGWActivityF, P
Influence of major Pulmonary resection on Postoperative daily ambulatory activity of the patientsNovoa, N., et al.2009SpainOriginal ProspectiveCardiothoracicPre, PostCGWActivity, BiometricsP
A prospective randomised double-blind study of functional outcome and range of flexion following total knee replacement with the NexGen standard and high flexion componentsNutton, R. W., et al.2008UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Does a mobile-bearing, high-flexion design increase knee flexion after total knee replacement?Nutton, R. W., et al.2012UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
Preoperative home-based physical therapy versus usual care to improve functional health of frail older adults scheduled for elective total hip arthroplasty: a pilot randomized controlled trialOosting, E., et al.2012NetherlandsFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPre, PostCGWActivityF
User Friendliness of a Wearable Visual Behavior Monitor for Cataract and Refractive SurgeryPajic, B., et al.2020SwitzerlandOriginal ProspectiveOphthalmologyPreCGWBiometricsF
Mandibular motion after closed and open treatment of unilateral mandibular condylar process fracturesPalmieri, C., et al.1999USAOriginal ProspectiveOromaxillofacialPostRGWBiometricsTM
Using Smartphones to Capture Novel Recovery Metrics After Cancer SurgeryPanda, N., et al.2020USAOriginal ProspectiveSurgical OncologyPostSPActivityF
Wearable activity sensors and early pain after total joint arthroplastyPatterson, J. T., et al.2020USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivity, BiometricsTM, RP
Armband activity monitor data do not correlate with reported pain scores in patients receiving vertebroplastyPeacock, J. G., et al.2016USAOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM, RP
Alteration and recovery of arm usage in daily activities after rotator cuff surgeryPichonnaz, C., et al.2015SwitzerlandOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM
Objectively measured mobilisation is enhanced by a new behaviour support tool in patients undergoing abdominal cancer surgeryPorserud, A., et al.2019SwedenOriginal ProspectiveSurgical OncologyPre, PostRGWActivityTM
Activity and affect: repeated within-participant assessment in people after joint replacement surgeryPowell, R., et al.2009UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityP
Continuous Digital Assessment for Weight Loss Surgery PatientsRamirez, E., et al.2020USAOriginal ProspectiveBariatricPostCGWBiometricsTM
Remote Patient Monitoring Using Mobile Health for Total Knee Arthroplasty: Validation of a Wearable and Machine Learning-Based Surveillance PlatformRamkumar, P. N., et al.2019USAFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostSP, RGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Walking, Sedentary Time and Health-Related Quality Life Among Kidney Transplant Recipients: An Exploratory StudyRaymond, J., et al.2015CanadaOriginal Cross-sectionalTransplantPostRGWActivity, BiometricsO
Dual Mode Gait Sonification for Rehabilitation After Unilateral Hip ArthroplastyReh, J., et al.2019GermanyOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM
A prospective randomized comparison of the minimally invasive direct anterior and the transgluteal approach for primary total hip arthroplastyReichert, J. C., et al.2018GermanyOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityO
Physical Activity and Sedentary Behavior in Bariatric Patients Long-Term Post-SurgeryReid, R. E. R., et al.2015CanadaOriginal ProspectiveBariatricPostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Physical activity levels after limb salvage surgery are not related to clinical scores-objective activity assessment in 22 patients after malignant bone tumor treatment with modular prosthesesRosenbaum, D., et al.2008GermanyOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM
Multi-segment foot kinematics after total ankle replacement and ankle arthrodesis during relatively long-distance gaitRouhani, H., et al.2012SwitzerlandOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM, O
The effect of total knee arthroplasty on joint movement during functional activities and joint range of motion with particular regard to higher flexion usersRowe, P. J., et al.2005UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWBiometricsRP
Energy Harvesting and Sensing with Embedded Piezoelectric Ceramics in Knee ImplantsSafaei, M., et al.2018USAFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivity, BiometricsF
Development and validation of a lower-extremity activity scale. Use for patients treated with revision total knee arthroplastySaleh, K. J., et al.2005USAFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostUnknownActivityP
Initial ExPerience with Real-Time Continuous Physical Activity Monitoring in Patients Undergoing Spine SurgeryScheer, J. K., et al.2017USAOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPostCGWActivityTM
Validation of Activity Tracking Procedures in Elderly Patients after Operative Treatment of Proximal Femur FracturesSchmal, H., et al.2018DenmarkOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityO
Quantitative assessment of walking activity after total hip or knee replacementSchmalzried, T. P., et al.1998USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityTM
Physical activity after outpatient surgery and enhanced recovery for total knee arthroplastySchotanus, M. G. M., et al.2017NetherlandsOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityTM, O
Step activity monitoring in lumbar stenosis patients undergoing decompressive surgerySchulte, T. L., et al.2010GermanyOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPre, PostRGWActivityTM
Horizontal jumping biomechanics among elite male handball players with and without anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. An inertial sensor unit-based studySetuain, I., et al.2019SpainOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
Acceleration and Orientation Jumping Performance Differences Among Elite Professional Male Handball Players with or Without Previous ACL Reconstruction: An Inertial Sensor Unit-Based StudySetuain, I., et al.2015SpainOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
Optimal Sampling Frequency for Wearable Sensor Data in Arthroplasty Outcomes RGW. A Prospective Observational Cohort TrialShah, R. F., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWBiometricsP
Step Activity After Surgical Treatment of Ankle ArthritisShofer, J. B., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivityTM
Activity sampling in the assessment of patients with total joint arthroplastySilva, M., et al.2005USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityTM
Dynamic assessment of the wrist after total wrist arthroplastySingh, H. P., et al.2017UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
Dynamic assessment of wrist after proximal row carpectomy and 4-corner fusionSingh, H. P., et al.2014UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
Comparison of the clinical and functional outcomes following 3- and 4-corner fusionsSingh, H. P., et al.2015UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
Quantifying Real-World Upper-Limb Activity Via Patient-Initiated Movement After Nerve Reconstruction for Upper Brachial Plexus InjurySmith, B. W., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPostRGWActivityF
The effect of electromagnetic navigation in total knee arthroplasty on knee kinematics during functional activities using flexible electrogoniometrySmith, J. R., et al.2013UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsO
A Randomized Study of Exercise and Fitness Trackers in Obese Patients After Total Knee ArthroplastySmith, W. A., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityO
Objective measurement of function following lumbar spinal stenosis decomPression reveals improved functional capacity with stagnant real-life physical activitySmuck, M., et al.2018USAOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPre, PostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Preliminary evidence for physical activity following pelvic exenteration: a pilot longitudinal cohort studySteffens, D., et al.2019AustraliaOriginal ProspectiveSurgical OncologyPostRGWActivityTM
A Cyber-Physical System for Near Real-Time Monitoring of At-Home Orthopedic Rehabilitation and Mobile-Based Provider-Patient Communications to Improve Adherence: Development and Formative EvaluationStevens, T., et al.2020USAFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostSPActivityF
Reliability of the 6-min walking test Smartphone applicationStienen, M. N., et al.2019SwitzerlandFeasibility/ValidityNeurosurgeryPostSPActivityF
Wireless Monitoring Program of Patient-Centered Outcomes and Recovery Before and After Major Abdominal Cancer SurgerySun, V., et al.2017USAOriginal ProspectiveGeneral SurgeryPre, PostCGWActivityTM
Clinical Evaluation of Implant-Supported Removable Partial Dentures with a Stress-Breaking AttachmentSuzuki, Y., et al.2017JapanOriginal ProspectiveOromaxillofacialPostCGWBiometricsTM, O
A Mobile Health Application to Track Patients After Gastrointestinal Surgery: Results from a Pilot StudySymer, M. M., et al.2017USAFeasibility/ValidityColorectalPostCGWBiometricsTM
Which functional assessments Predict long-term wear after total hip arthroplasty?Takenaga, R. K., et al.2013USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityP
Physical Behavior and Function Early After Hip Fracture Surgery in Patients Receiving Comprehensive Geriatric Care or Orthopedic Care-A Randomized Controlled TrialTaraldsen, K., et al.2014NorwayOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM, P
Multiple days of monitoring are needed to obtain a reliable estimate of physical activity in hip-fracture patientsTaraldsen, K., et al.2014NorwayOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM, O
The long-term effect of being treated in a geriatric ward compared to an orthopaedic ward on six measures of free-living physical behavior 4 and 12 months after a hip fracture—a randomised controlled trialTaraldsen, K., et al.2014NorwayOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM
John Charnley Award: Randomized Clinical Trial of Direct Anterior and MiniPosterior Approach THA: Which Provides Better Functional Recovery?Taunton, M. J., et al.2018USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityO
Quantified-Self for Obesity: Physical Activity Behaviour Sensing to Improve Health OutcomesTaylor, D., et al.2016UKOriginal ProspectiveBariatricPre, PostSPActivityF, TM
The Ambulatory Eye Shield Head Tracking Device with Real-Time Feedback for Gas Filled Eye PatientsThanawattano, C., et al.2019ThailandFeasibility/ValidityOphthalmologyPostSP, RGWBiometricsF
Assessment of Physical Activity by Wearable Technology During Rehabilitation After Cardiac Surgery: Explorative Prospective Monocentric Observational Cohort StudyThijs, I., et al.2019BelgiumOriginal ProspectiveCardiothoracicPostCGWActivityO
Recovery of mandibular motion after closed and open treatment of unilateral mandibular condylar process fracturesThrockmorton, G. S. and E. Ellis2000USAOriginal ProspectiveOromaxillofacialPostRGWBiometricsTM
The monitoring of activity at home after total hip arthroplastyToogood, P. A., et al.2016USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityTM
Normative data of a Smartphone app-based 6-min walking test, test-retest reliability, and content validity with patient-reported outcome measuresTosic, L., et al.2020SwitzerlandFeasibility/ValidityNeurosurgeryPostSPActivityO
Evaluation of improvement in quality of life and physical activity after total knee arthroplasty in greek elderly womenTsonga, T., et al.2011GreeceOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityTM
Telerehabilitation of Patients with Injuries of the Lower ExtremitiesTsvyakh, A. I. and A. J. Hospodarskyy2017UkraineFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityO
Measurement of physical activity in the Pre- and early Post-operative Period after total knee arthroplasty for Osteoarthritis using a Fitbit Flex deviceTwiggs, J., et al.2018AustraliaOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostCGWActivityTM
Measuring physical activity in patients after surgery for a malignant tumour in the leg—The reliability and validity of a continuous ambulatory activity monitorvan Dam, M. S., et al.2001NetherlandsFeasibility/ValiditySurgical OncologyPostRGWActivityTM
Measuring physical activity in patients after surgery for a malignant tumour in the leg. The reliability and validity of a continuous ambulatory activity monitorvan Dam, M. S., et al.2001NetherlandsOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM
Fatigue, level of everyday physical activity and quality of life after liver transplantationvan den Berg-Emons, R., et al.2006NetherlandsOriginal ProspectiveTransplantPostRGWActivityTM
Knee kinematics in functional activities seven years after total knee arthroplastyvan der Linden, M. L., et al.2006UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
Between-day repeatability of knee kinematics during functional tasks recorded using flexible electrogoniometryvan der Linden, M. L., et al.2008UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
Exercise therapy after coronary artery bypass graft surgery: a randomized comparison of a high and low frequency exercise therapy programvan der Peijl, I. D., et al.2004NetherlandsOriginal ProspectiveCardiothoracicPostRGWActivityRP
Feedback From Activity Trackers Improves Daily Step Count After Knee and Hip Arthroplasty: A Randomized Controlled TrialVan der Walt, N., et al.2018AustraliaOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostCGWActivityO
Validation of a novel activity monitor in impaired, slow-walking, crutch-supported patientsvan Laarhoven, S. N., et al.2016NetherlandsFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityF
Individual Patient-reported Activity Levels Before and After Joint Arthroplasty Are Neither Accurate nor ReproducibleVaughn, N. H., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostCGWActivityTM
A kinematical analysis of the shoulder after arthroplasty during a hair combing taskVeeger, H. E., et al.2006NetherlandsOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsP
Grammont versus lateralizing reverse shoulder arthroplasty for proximal humerus fracture: functional and radiographic outcomesVerdano, M. A., et al.2018ItalyOriginal RetrospectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsO
Walking and chair rising performed in the daily life situation before and after total hip arthroplastyVissers, M. M., et al.2011NetherlandsOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivityTM
Functional capacity and actual daily activity do not contribute to patient satisfaction after total knee arthroplastyVissers, M. M., et al.2010NetherlandsOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivityO
Function and activity after minimally invasive total hip arthroplasty compared to a healthy populationvon Rottkay, E., et al.2018GermanyOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM
Wearable Sensor-Based Digital Biomarker to Estimate Chest Expansion During Sit-to-Stand Transitions—A Practical Tool to Improve Sternal Precautions in Patients Undergoing Median SternotomyWang, C., et al.2019USAFeasibility/ValidityCardiothoracicPostRGWBiometricsF
Quantifying the influence of DBS surgery in patients with Parkinson’s disease during Perioperative Period by wearable sensorsWang, J., et al.2019ChinaOriginal ProspectiveNeurosurgeryPre, Peri, PostRGWBiometricsTM
Upper extremity function in the free living environment of adults with traumatic brachial plexus injuriesWebber, C. M., et al.2019USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPre, PostRGWActivity, BiometricsTM
Sedentary Behavior, Cadence, and Physical Activity Outcomes after Knee ArthroplastyWebber, S. C., et al.2017CanadaOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM, RP
Use of Activity Tracking in Major Visceral Surgerythe Enhanced Perioperative Mobilization Trial: a Randomized Controlled TrialWolk, S., et al.2017GermanyOriginal ProspectiveGeneral SurgeryPostCGWActivityF
Wearable-Based Mobile Health App in Gastric Cancer Patients for Postoperative Physical Activity Monitoring: Focus Group StudyWu, J. M., et al.2019TaiwanFeasibility/ValiditySurgical OncologyPre, Peri, PostSPActivityF
Assessing function in patients undergoing joint replacement: a study protocol for a cohort studyWylde, V., et al.2012UKOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWActivityTM
Implantable Multi-Modality Probe for Subdural Simultaneous Measurement of Electrophysiology, Hemodynamics, and Temperature DistributionYamakawa, T., et al.2019JapanFeasibility/ValidityNeurosurgeryPeri, PostRGWBiometricsF
Sensor-Based Upper-Extremity Frailty Assessment for the Vascular Risk StratificationYanquez, F. J., et al.2020USAFeasibility/ValidityVascularPostRGWBiometricsRP
Kinematic study of the temporomandibular joint in normal subjects and patients following unilateral temporomandibular joint arthrotomy with metal fossa-eminence partial joint replacementYoon, H. J., et al.2007South KoreaOriginal ProspectiveOromaxillofacialPostSP, CGWBiometricsTM
Biomechanical Gait Variable Estimation Using Wearable Sensors after Unilateral Total Knee ArthroplastyYoun, I. H., et al.2018South KoreaFeasibility/ValidityOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsF
Over-the-top ACL Reconstruction Plus Extra-articular Lateral Tenodesis with Hamstring Tendon Grafts: Prospective Evaluation with 20-Year Minimum Follow-upZaffagnini, S., et al.2017ItalyOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
Assessing activity in joint replacement patientsZahiri, C. A., et al.1998USAOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostUnknownActivityTM
Evaluation of Gait Variable Change over Time as Transtibial Amputees Adapt to a New Prosthesis FootZhang, X., et al.2019ChinaOriginal ProspectiveOrthopaedicsPostRGWBiometricsTM
CGW = Consumer-Grade Wearables, RGW = Research-Grade Wearables, SP = Smartphone, F = Feasibility, TM = Tracking or Monitoring, RP = Risk Profiling, O = Optimization, P = Prediction.

Appendix D

Table A3. List of Surgical Specialties and Procedures.
Table A3. List of Surgical Specialties and Procedures.
Bariatric SurgeryObstetrics and GynecologyMeniscectomy
Gastric Bypass SurgeryCesarian SectionProximal Femur Fracture Fixation
Breast SurgeryHysterectomyProximal Row Carpectomy
MastectomyOphthalmologic SurgeryTranstibial Amputation
Breast Cancer SurgeryCataract SurgeryRotator Cuff Repair
Cardiothoracic SurgeryEye SurgeryShoulder Surgery
AngioplastyOromaxillofacial SurgeryShoulder Arthroplasty
Arterial CatheterizationDental Implantation SurgeryShoulder Prostheses Surgery
Cardiac SurgeryTemporomandibular Joint ReplacementSpinal Stenosis Surgery
Coronary Artery Bypass GraftingUnilateral Mandibular Condylar FixationSpine Surgery
Elective Cardiac SurgeryOrthopedic SurgeryTotal Ankle Arthroplasty
Pulmonary Surgery3-Corner-FusionTotal Hip Arthroplasty
Lung Cancer Surgery4-Corner FusionTotal Joint Arthroplasty
Lung LobectomyAchilles Tendon Rupture RepairTotal Knee Arthroplasty
Lung ResectionACL Reconstruction SurgeryTotal Wrist Arthroplasty
Major Pulmonary SurgeryAnkle SurgeryVertebroplasty
SternotomyBack SurgerySurgical Oncology
Thoracic SurgeryCarpal Tunnel ReleaseAbdominal Cancer Resection
Colorectal SurgeryDecompressive Spine SurgeryMajor Oncologic Surgery
General SurgeryEndoprosthesis SurgeryPelvic Exenteration
Abdominal SurgeryFracture RepairSarcoma Resection
Gastric Resection SurgeryHallux Valgus Correction SurgeryLower Extremity Tumor Resection
Gastrointestinal ResectionHip Fracture SurgeryTransplant Surgery
Hepatic ResectionHip SurgeryElective Organ Transplantation
Hepatobiliary ResectionKnee Prostheses SurgeryKidney Transplant Surgery
Inguinal SurgeryLimb Salvage SurgeryLiver Transplant Surgery
Major Abdominal SurgeryLower Extremity Orthopedic SurgeryUrologic Surgery
Neurosurgery Lower Limb Amputation SurgeryCystectomy
Brachial Plexus Nerve Transfer Surgery Lumbar Decompression SurgeryVascular Surgery
Deep Brain StimulationLumbar MicrodiscectomyLower Limb Amputation Surgery
Transsphenoidal SurgeryLumbar Spine Surgery
Traumatic Brachial Plexus Injury RepairMalleolar Fracture Fixation

Appendix E

Table A4. Technologies including Activity Trackers, Smartphone Applications, Research-/Commercial-grade wearables, Other Sensors.
Table A4. Technologies including Activity Trackers, Smartphone Applications, Research-/Commercial-grade wearables, Other Sensors.
Research-Grade Wearables and SensorsMagnet Sensors (Other)Activity Tracker/Monitor (Other)Sportline 345 Pedometer
Actigraph AM7164-2.2 activity monitorMagnetometer (Other)Apple WatchSportline Pedometer
Actigraph GT1M accelerometerMicro-Motion Logger SystemAxivity AX3SW200 Yamax Digiwalker Pedometer
ActiGraph GT3X+ Activity Monitors Microstrain Inertia LinkBioPACK Tracking DeviceUSB Accelerometer ModelX8M-3
ActiGraph wGT3X-BT accelerometerMoLab Portable Motion Sensor SystemDigi-Walker SW-200 PedometerUSB accelerometer X16-mini
ActivPAL activity monitorMTx Inertial Orientation TrackerFitbaseVisual Behavior Monitor
ADXL 210 acclerometersMVN AwindaFitbit (Other)Wavelet Health Wristband
ADXRS 250 gyroscopesNoraxon accelerometerFitbit ChargeWithings Pulse Ox Activity Monitor
AMP-331c Activity MonitorNottingham Leg ExtensorPower (LEP)Fitbit FlexYamax FitPro Pedometer
Analog Devices accelerometerPedar-XFitbit ZipYamax SW 200/LS2000 Pedometer
APDM Movement Monitoring SystemPOHTRACK (Postoperative Head Tracking Device)Fitness Tracker (Other)Smartphone Applications
Biometrics XM65 ElectrogoniometerRehaGait R SystemGarmin (Other)6WT Application
BioSensics Triaxial Gyroscope SensorsSaphon Visi-trainer3Garmin Vivoactive HR deviceBeiwe Application
BioStampRC SensorsSenseWear Pro2Garmin Vivofit2 Capstesia Application
Dynaport ADL monitorSenseWear Pro3GC Dataconcepts LLC Accelerometer Activity MonitormHealth Application
Electrogoniometer (Other)SensiumVitalsHITEC PedometerMoves Application by Protogeo
Exfix AccelerometerSensors (other)Lumo Lift DevicePOHTRACK (Postoperative Head Tracking Device) Application
Flock of BirdsSG150 Flexible ElectrogoniometerLumo RunRehabilitation Monitoring Application
FootswitchesSHIMMER 2R Sensor UnitsMetaWear C Sensor BoardSmartphone accelerometer
GT9X Link ActiGraphShoWIderMiBand2Spine-Specifc 6WT Application
GWalk SensorSirognathograph by Siemens CorpMicrosoftKinect v2 sensorSurgeryDiary Application
Gyroscope (Other)Sphygmomanometer (Other)Mio Activity Tracker (Other)The Motion-Monitor
HipGuardStepWatch 3™Activity MonitorMisfit ShineThe NeuroPath Application
IC-3031 Uniaxial Piezo-resistive AccelerometersTemec Instruments AccelerometerNew Lifestyles NL-800 PedometerThe RehabTracker Application
Inclination Sensors (Other)The HealthPatch MDOmron HJ-321-E PedometerTKR Application
Inertial Measurement UnitThe PAMOmron HJ-720 TE2 PedometerWalkOn Application
Intelligent Device for EnergyExpenditure and ActivityThe Wake Forest RTLSOmron PedometerUnknown
Kenz Lifecoder GS AccelerometerVitaport3 accelerometerPhysilog ®® activity monitorPedometer (other)
KiRAConsumer-Grade WearablesPolar Loop activity tracker
Lifecoder EX Pedometer3Space Fastrak SystemPower Walker EX-510 Yamax Step Counter
M180 ElectrogoniometerActiv8™ Professional Activity MonitorSmartwatch (Other)

References

  1. Austin, E.; Lee, J.R.; Amtmann, D.; Bloch, R.; Lawrence, S.O.; McCall, D.; Munson, S.; Lavallee, D.C. Use of patient-generated health data across healthcare settings: Implications for health systems. JAMIA Open 2020, 3, 70–76. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  2. Jim, H.; Hoogland, A.I.; Brownstein, N.C.; Barata, A.; Dicker, A.P.; Knoop, H.; Gonzalez, B.D.; Perkins, R.; Rollison, D.; Gilbert, S.M.; et al. Innovations in research and clinical care using patient-generated health data. CA Cancer J. Clin. 2020, 70, 182–199. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  3. Witt, D.R.; Kellogg, R.A.; Snyder, M.P.; Dunn, J. Windows into human health through wearables data analytics. Curr. Opin. Biomed. Eng. 2019, 9, 28–46. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  4. Braun, B.J.; Grimm, B.; Hanflik, A.M.; Marmor, M.T.; Richter, P.H.; Sands, A.K.; Sivananthan, S. Finding NEEMO: Towards organizing smart digital solutions in orthopaedic trauma surgery. EFORT Open Rev. 2020, 5, 408–420. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  5. Wall, J.; Krummel, T. The digital surgeon: How big data, automation, and artificial intelligence will change surgical practice. J. Pediatr. Surg. 2020, 55, 47–50. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Jain, S.H.; Powers, B.W.; Hawkins, J.B.; Brownstein, J.S. The digital phenotype. Nat. Biotechnol. 2015, 33, 462–463. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Insel, T.R. Digital phenotyping: Technology for a new science of behavior. JAMA 2017, 318, 1215–1216. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Vaidyam, A.; Halamka, J.; Torous, J. Actionable digital phenotyping: A framework for the delivery of just-in-time and longitudinal interventions in clinical healthcare. Mhealth 2019, 5, 25. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Huckvale, K.; Venkatesh, S.; Christensen, H. Toward clinical digital phenotyping: A timely opportunity to consider purpose, quality, and safety. NPJ Digit. Med. 2019, 2, 88. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  10. Barnett, S.; Huckvale, K.; Christensen, H.; Venkatesh, S.; Mouzakis, K.; Vasa, R. Intelligent Sensing to Inform and Learn (InSTIL): A scalable and governance-aware platform for universal, smartphone-based digital phenotyping for research and clinical applications. J. Med. Internet Res. 2019, 21, e16399. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Chang, C.-H. Patient-Reported outcomes measurement and management with innovative methodologies and technologies. Qual. Life Res. 2007, 16, 157–166. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  12. Black, N. Patient reported outcome measures could help transform healthcare. BMJ 2013, 346, f167. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  13. Greenhalgh, J.; Dalkin, S.; Gooding, K.; Gibbons, E.; Wright, J.; Meads, D.; Black, N.; Valderas, J.M.; Pawson, R. Functionality and feedback: A realist synthesis of the collation, interpretation and utilisation of patient-reported outcome measures data to improve patient care. Health Serv. Deliv. Res. 2017, 5, 1–280. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  14. Muehlhausen, W.; Doll, H.; Quadri, N.; Fordham, B.; O’Donohoe, P.; Dogar, N.; Wild, D.J. Equivalence of electronic and paper administration of patient-reported outcome measures: A systematic review and meta-analysis of studies conducted between 2007 and 2013. Health Qual. Life Outcomes 2015, 13, 167. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  15. Jensen, R.E.; Rothrock, N.E.; DeWitt, E.M.; Spiegel, B.; Tucker, C.A.; Crane, H.M.; Forrest, C.B.; Patrick, D.L.; Fredericksen, R.; Shulman, L.M.; et al. The role of technical advances in the adoption and integration of patient-reported outcomes in clinical care. Med. Care 2015, 53, 153–159. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  16. Black, N.; Varaganum, M.; Hutchings, A. Relationship between patient reported experience (PREMs) and patient reported outcomes (PROMs) in elective surgery. BMJ Qual. Saf. 2014, 23, 534–542. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  17. Nguyen, H.; Butow, P.; Dhillon, H.; Sundaresan, P. A review of the barriers to using Patient-Reported Outcomes (PROs) and Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) in routine cancer care. J. Med. Radiat. Sci. 2020. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Panda, N.; Solsky, I.; Huang, E.J.; Lipsitz, S.; Pradarelli, J.C.; Delisle, M.; Cusack, J.C.; Gadd, M.A.; Lubitz, C.C.; Mullen, J.T.; et al. Using smartphones to capture novel recovery metrics after cancer surgery. JAMA Surg. 2020, 155, 123–129. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Khangura, S.; Konnyu, K.; Cushman, R.; Grimshaw, J.; Moher, D. Evidence summaries: The evolution of a rapid review approach. Syst. Rev. 2012, 1, 10. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  20. Tricco, A.C.; Lillie, E.; Zarin, W.; O’Brien, K.; Colquhoun, H.; Levac, D.; Moher, D.; Peters, M.; Horsley, T.; Weeks, L.; et al. PRISMA Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR): Checklist and explanation. Ann. Intern. Med. 2018, 169, 467–473. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  21. WHO. WHO|Rapid Reviews to Strengthen Health Policy and Systems: A Practical Guide. Available online: http://www.who.int/alliance-hpsr/resources/publications/rapid-review-guide/en/ (accessed on 21 September 2020).
  22. Peters, M.D.J.; Godfrey, C.M.; Khalil, H.; McInerney, P.; Parker, D.; Soares, C.B. Guidance for conducting systematic scoping reviews. Int. J. Evid. Based Healthc. 2015, 13, 141–146. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  23. Moher, D.; Liberati, A.; Tetzlaff, J.; Altman, D.G.; The PRISMA Group. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and MetaAnalyses: The PRISMA Statement. PLoS Med. 2009, 6, e1000097. [Google Scholar]
  24. Shantz, J.A.S.; Veillette, C.J.H. The application of wearable technology in surgery: Ensuring the positive impact of the wearable revolution on surgical patients. Front. Surg. 2014, 1, 39. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  25. Meijer, R.; van Limbeek, J.; Kriek, B.; Ihnenfeldt, D.; Vermeulen, M.; de Haan, R. Prognostic social factors in the subacute phase after a stroke for the discharge destination from the hospital stroke-unit. A systematic review of the literature. Disabil. Rehabil. 2004, 26, 191–197. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  26. Kwasnicki, R.M.; Ali, R.; Jordan, S.J.; Atallah, L.; Leong, J.J.; Jones, G.G.; Cobb, J.; Yang, G.Z.; Darzi, A. A wearable mobility assessment device for total knee replacement: A longitudinal feasibility study. Int. J. Surg. 2015, 18, 14–20. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Chiang, C.-Y.; Chen, K.-H.; Liu, K.-C.; Hsu, S.J.-P.; Chan, C.-T. Data collection and analysis using wearable sensors for monitoring knee range of motion after total knee arthroplasty. Sensors 2017, 17, 418. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Youn, I.-H.; Youn, J.-H.; Zeni, J.A.; Knarr, B.A. Biomechanical gait variable estimation using wearable sensors after unilateral total knee arthroplasty. Sensors 2018, 18, 1577. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  29. Teufl, W.; Taetz, B.; Miezal, M.; Lorenz, M.; Pietschmann, J.; Jöllenbeck, T.; Fröhlich, M.; Bleser, G. Towards an inertial sensor-based wearable feedback system for patients after total hip arthroplasty: Validity and applicability for gait classification with gait kinematics-based features. Sensors 2019, 19, 5006. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  30. Cote, D.J.; Barnett, I.; Onnela, J.-P.; Smith, T.R. Digital phenotyping in patients with spine disease: A novel approach to quantifying mobility and quality of life. World Neurosurg. 2019. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  31. Buchman, A.S.; Dawe, R.J.; Leurgans, S.E.; Curran, T.A.; Truty, T.; Yu, L.; Barnes, L.L.; Hausdorff, J.M.; Bennett, D.A. Different combinations of mobility metrics derived from a wearable sensor are associated with distinct health outcomes in older adults. J. Gerontol. Biol. Sci. Med. Sci. 2020. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  32. Montag, C.; Sindermann, C.; Baumeister, H. Digital phenotyping in psychological and medical sciences: A reflection about necessary prerequisites to reduce harm and increase benefits. Curr. Opin. Psychol. 2020, 36, 19–24. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  33. Cohen, A.B.; Mathews, S.C. The digital outcome measure. Digit. Biomark. 2018, 2, 94–105. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  34. Ebner-Priemer, U.; Santangelo, P. Digital phenotyping: Hype or hope? Lancet Psychiatry 2020, 7, 297–299. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Marsch, L.A. Digital health data-driven approaches to understand human behavior. Neuropsychopharmacology 2021. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  36. Martinez-Martin, N.; Char, D. Surveillance and digital health. Am. J. Bioeth. 2018, 18, 67–68. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  37. Onnela, J.-P.; Rauch, S.L. Harnessing smartphone-based digital phenotyping to enhance behavioral and mental health. Neuropsychopharmacology 2016, 41, 1691–1696. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  38. Jacobson, N.C.; Summers, B.; Wilhelm, S. Digital biomarkers of social anxiety severity: Digital phenotyping using passive smartphone sensors. J. Med. Internet Res. 2020, 22, e16875. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  39. Jacobson, N.C.; Weingarden, H.; Wilhelm, S. Using digital phenotyping to accurately detect depression severity. J. Nerv. Ment. Dis. 2019, 207, 893–896. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  40. Raballo, A. Digital phenotyping: An overarching framework to capture our extended mental states. Lancet Psychiatry 2018, 5, 194–195. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  41. Torous, J.; Staples, P.; Barnett, I.; Onnela, J.-P.; Keshavan, M. A crossroad for validating digital tools in schizophrenia and mental health. NPJ Schizophr. 2018, 4, 6. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  42. Kleiman, E.M.; Turner, B.J.; Fedor, S.; Beale, E.E.; Picard, R.W.; Huffman, J.C.; Nock, M.K. Digital phenotyping of suicidal thoughts. Depress. Anxiety 2018, 35, 601–608. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  43. Moukaddam, N.; Truong, A.; Cao, J.; Shah, A.; Sabharwal, A. Findings from a Trial of the Smartphone and OnLine Usage-based eValuation for Depression (SOLVD) application: What do apps really tell us about patients with depression? Concordance between app-generated data and standard psychiatric questionnaires for depression and anxiety. J. Psychiatr. Pract. 2019, 25, 365–373. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  44. Guimond, S.; Keshavan, M.S.; Torous, J.B. Towards remote digital phenotyping of cognition in schizophrenia. Schizophr. Res. 2019, 208, 36–38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  45. Zulueta, J.; Piscitello, A.; Rasic, M.; Easter, R.; Babu, P.; Langenecker, S.A.; McInnis, M.G.; Ajilore, O.; Nelson, P.C.; Ryan, K.A.; et al. Predicting mood disturbance severity with mobile phone keystroke metadata: A biaffect digital phenotyping study. J. Med. Internet Res. 2018, 20, e241. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  46. Wisniewski, H.; Henson, P.; Torous, J. Using a smartphone app to identify clinically relevant behavior trends via symptom report, cognition scores, and exercise levels: A case series. Front. Psychiatry 2019, 10, 652. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  47. Berry, J.D.; Paganoni, S.; Carlson, K.; Burke, K.; Weber, H.; Staples, P.; Salinas, J.; Chan, J.; Green, J.R.; Connaghan, K.; et al. Design and results of a smartphone-based digital phenotyping study to quantify ALS progression. Ann. Clin. Transl. Neurol. 2019, 6, 873–881. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  48. Kourtis, L.C.; Regele, O.B.; Wright, J.M.; Jones, G.B. Digital biomarkers for Alzheimer’s disease: The mobile/ wearable devices opportunity. NPJ Digit. Med. 2019, 2. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  49. Doryab, A.; Villalba, D.K.; Chikersal, P.; Dutcher, J.M.; Tumminia, M.; Liu, X.; Cohen, S.; Creswell, K.G.; Mankoff, J.; Creswell, J.D.; et al. Identifying behavioral phenotypes of loneliness and social isolation with passive sensing: Statistical analysis, data mining and machine learning of smartphone and fitbit data. JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2019, 7, e13209. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  50. Skinner, A.L.; Attwood, A.S.; Baddeley, R.; Evans-Reeves, K.; Bauld, L.; Munafò, M.R. Digital phenotyping and the development and delivery of health guidelines and behaviour change interventions. Addiction 2017, 112, 1281–1285. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  51. Papi, E.; Koh, W.S.; McGregor, A.H. Wearable technology for spine movement assessment: A systematic review. J. Biomech. 2017, 64, 186–197. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  52. Papi, E.; Belsi, A.; McGregor, A.H. A knee monitoring device and the preferences of patients living with osteoarthritis: A qualitative study. BMJ Open 2015, 5, e007980. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  53. Papi, E.; Osei-Kuffour, D.; Chen, Y.-M.A.; McGregor, A.H. Use of wearable technology for performance assessment: A validation study. Med. Eng. Phys. 2015, 37, 698–704. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  54. Breteler, M.J.M.; Kleinjan, E.; Numan, L.; Ruurda, J.P.; Van Hillegersberg, R.; Leenen, L.P.; Hermans, M.C.; Kalkman, C.J.; Blokhuis, T.J. Are current wireless monitoring systems capable of detecting adverse events in high-risk surgical patients? A descriptive study. Injury 2020, 51, S97–S105. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  55. Maher, N.A.; Senders, J.T.; Hulsbergen, A.F.; Lamba, N.; Parker, M.; Onnela, J.-P.; Bredenoord, A.L.; Smith, T.R.; Broekman, M.L.D. Passive data collection and use in healthcare: A systematic review of ethical issues. Int. J. Med. Inform. 2019, 129, 242–247. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  56. Warraich, H.J.; Califf, R.M.; Krumholz, H.M. The digital transformation of medicine can revitalize the patient-clinician relationship. NPJ Digit. Med. 2018, 1, 49. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  57. Rieger, A.; Gaines, A.; Barnett, I.; Baldassano, C.F.; Gibbons, M.B.C.; Crits-Christoph, P. Psychiatry outpatients’ willingness to share social media posts and smartphone data for research and clinical purposes: Survey study. JMIR Form. Res. 2019, 3, e14329. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  58. Pevnick, J.M.; Fuller, G.; Duncan, R.; Spiegel, B.M.R. A large-scale initiative inviting patients to share personal fitness tracker data with their providers: Initial results. PLoS ONE 2016, 11, e0165908. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  59. Greenhalgh, J.; Gooding, K.; Gibbons, E.; Dalkin, S.; Wright, J.; Valderas, J.M.; Black, N. How do patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) support clinician-patient communication and patient care? A realist synthesis. J. Patient Rep. Outcomes 2018, 2, 42. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  60. Buchlak, Q.D.; Esmaili, N.; Leveque, J.-C.; Farrokhi, F.; Bennett, C.; Piccardi, M.; Sethi, R.K. Machine learning applications to clinical decision support in neurosurgery: An artificial intelligence augmented systematic review. Neurosurg. Rev. 2020, 43, 1235–1253. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  61. Higaki, A.; Uetani, T.; Ikeda, S.; Yamaguchi, O. Co-Authorship network analysis in cardiovascular research utilizing machine learning (2009–2019). Int. J. Med. Inform. 2020, 143. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Figure 1. PRISMA Flow Diagram of study identification, screening, eligibility, and inclusion in final review [23].
Figure 1. PRISMA Flow Diagram of study identification, screening, eligibility, and inclusion in final review [23].
Jpm 10 00282 g001
Figure 2. Total number of publications by year for studies related to digital phenotyping and patient-generated health data for outcome measurement in surgical care.
Figure 2. Total number of publications by year for studies related to digital phenotyping and patient-generated health data for outcome measurement in surgical care.
Jpm 10 00282 g002
Figure 3. Geographical distribution of studies by country of origin where work was conducted. Studies originated from a total of 29 different countries.
Figure 3. Geographical distribution of studies by country of origin where work was conducted. Studies originated from a total of 29 different countries.
Jpm 10 00282 g003
Figure 4. Pie chart representing the number of studies by study design.
Figure 4. Pie chart representing the number of studies by study design.
Jpm 10 00282 g004
Figure 5. Area chart representing number of studies by surgical specialty. Studies spanned a total of 14 surgical specialties.
Figure 5. Area chart representing number of studies by surgical specialty. Studies spanned a total of 14 surgical specialties.
Jpm 10 00282 g005
Figure 6. A Sankey-type flow diagram representing flow of studies by technology, data and function.
Figure 6. A Sankey-type flow diagram representing flow of studies by technology, data and function.
Jpm 10 00282 g006
Figure 7. The “Activity-Biometrics-Communication” Framework of Activity, Biometric, and Communications data points captured using Personal Digital Devices. This does not include capture of patient-reported outcome measurements (PROMs) and other survey questions via Smartphone applications/other devices.
Figure 7. The “Activity-Biometrics-Communication” Framework of Activity, Biometric, and Communications data points captured using Personal Digital Devices. This does not include capture of patient-reported outcome measurements (PROMs) and other survey questions via Smartphone applications/other devices.
Jpm 10 00282 g007
Table 1. Summary of number of publications within country, surgical specialty, pathway phase, data type, and function categories.
Table 1. Summary of number of publications within country, surgical specialty, pathway phase, data type, and function categories.
CategoryNumber of Publications
CountryUSA74
UK23
Netherlands21
Australia17
Germany14
Switzerland10
Canada7
Spain7
Japan6
Italy5
South Korea5
Belgium4
Norway4
Sweden4
Brazil3
Denmark3
Taiwan3
China2
Greece2
Finland1
France1
Israel1
Portugal1
Romania1
Serbia1
South Africa1
Thailand1
Turkey1
Ukraine1
Surgical SpecialtyBariatric10
Breast1
Cardiothoracic15
Colorectal2
General13
Neurosurgery24
Obstetrics/Gynecology2
Ophthalmology3
Oromaxillofacial6
Orthopaedics129
Surgical Oncology11
Transplant7
Urologic1
Vascular4
Pathway PhasePost171
Peri4
Pre, Post36
Pre, Peri, Post2
Peri, Post1
Pre10
Data TypeActivity122
Biometrics59
Communication0
Activity, Biometrics41
Activity, Communication2
FunctionFeasibility61
Tracking or Monitoring82
Prediction18
Risk Profiling8
Optimization18
Feasibility, Tracking or Monitoring10
Feasibility, Prediction1
Feasibility, Risk Profiling, Prediction1
Feasibility, Tracking or Monitoring, Prediction3
Feasibility, Tracking or Monitoring, Risk Profiling2
Risk Profiling, Prediction1
Risk Profiling, Prediction, Optimization1
Tracking or Monitoring, Optimization5
Tracking or Monitoring, Prediction6
Tracking or Monitoring, Risk Profiling5
Tracking or Monitoring, Risk Profiling, Optimization1
Tracking or Monitoring, Risk Profiling, Prediction1
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Jayakumar, P.; Lin, E.; Galea, V.; Mathew, A.J.; Panda, N.; Vetter, I.; Haynes, A.B. Digital Phenotyping and Patient-Generated Health Data for Outcome Measurement in Surgical Care: A Scoping Review. J. Pers. Med. 2020, 10, 282. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm10040282

AMA Style

Jayakumar P, Lin E, Galea V, Mathew AJ, Panda N, Vetter I, Haynes AB. Digital Phenotyping and Patient-Generated Health Data for Outcome Measurement in Surgical Care: A Scoping Review. Journal of Personalized Medicine. 2020; 10(4):282. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm10040282

Chicago/Turabian Style

Jayakumar, Prakash, Eugenia Lin, Vincent Galea, Abraham J. Mathew, Nikhil Panda, Imelda Vetter, and Alex B. Haynes. 2020. "Digital Phenotyping and Patient-Generated Health Data for Outcome Measurement in Surgical Care: A Scoping Review" Journal of Personalized Medicine 10, no. 4: 282. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm10040282

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop