‘New kid on the block’
Frederick Ho, PhD, a lecturer in public health at the University of Glasgow (Scotland), who is a volunteer spokesperson for the American Heart Association, called the study “promising.”
“The study follow-up is relatively short, so it is not known whether the association is valid longer term,” he said in an interview. “It is also possible that patients with more severe symptoms became physically less active, and at the same time had worse outcomes.
“A study with longer follow-up among patients from a broader background would provide confidence on the generalizability of the findings,” said Dr. Ho, who led a recent study that showed accelerometer-measured physical activity was associated with a lower risk of heart failure. “It’d also be interesting to validate the findings using different types of wearable devices.”
Previous studies have shown that wrist-worn wearables might overestimate light-intensity activities, compared with hip-worn devices, he noted. “I’d imagine that the findings would be slightly different due to different types of devices, but the overall premise should remain.”
In a related editorial, Mitchell Psotka, MD, PhD, writes that Dr. Golbus and colleagues “have thankfully moved our understanding of actigraphy forward, although it is still the new kid on the block and will require substantial further testing and validation before widespread reliable clinical and research use.”
Terminology and reporting features need to be standardized, and preferred methods of implementation need to be established, including how to wear the devices, he suggests.
Further research is needed to validate that “accelerometers and their digitally processed movement ‘counts’ actually measure activity and that this measured activity has clinical relevance.”
The study did not receive commercial funding. Dr. Golbus, Dr. Ho, and Dr. Psotka report no relevant relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.