Integrating digital gait data with metabolomics and clinical data to predict outcomes in Parkinson’s disease

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Abstract

Parkinson’s disease (PD) presents diverse symptoms and comorbidities, complicating its diagnosis and management. The primary objective of this cross-sectional, monocentric study was to assess digital gait sensor data’s utility for monitoring and diagnosis of motor and gait impairment in PD. As a secondary objective, for the more challenging tasks of detecting comorbidities, non-motor outcomes, and disease progression subgroups, we evaluated for the first time the integration of digital markers with metabolomics and clinical data. Using shoe-attached digital sensors, we collected gait measurements from 162 patients and 129 controls in a single visit. Machine learning models showed significant diagnostic power, with AUC scores of 83–92% for PD vs. control and up to 75% for motor severity classification. Integrating gait data with metabolomics and clinical data improved predictions for challenging-to-detect comorbidities such as hallucinations. Overall, this approach using digital biomarkers and multimodal data integration can assist in objective disease monitoring, diagnosis, and comorbidity detection.

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Brzenczek, C., Klopfenstein, Q., Hähnel, T., Fröhlich, H., Glaab, E., Zelimkhanov, G., … Acharya, G. (2024). Integrating digital gait data with metabolomics and clinical data to predict outcomes in Parkinson’s disease. Npj Digital Medicine, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-024-01236-z

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