TY - JOUR
T1 - The CCJR® Gerard A. Engh Excellence in Knee Research Award
T2 - Remote Monitoring of Sleep Disturbance Following Total Knee Arthroplasty: A Cautionary Note
AU - Gibian, Joseph T.
AU - Bartosiak, Kimberly A.
AU - Riegler, Venessa
AU - King, Jackie
AU - Lucey, Brendan P.
AU - Barrack, Robert L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2024/8
Y1 - 2024/8
N2 - Background: Sleep disturbances are common after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Despite the rising popularity of wearables to track sleep, little evidence exists in the arthroplasty literature regarding their efficacy. We aimed to correlate validated wearable sleep metrics with patient-reported sleep quality following TKA. Methods: Patients undergoing primary TKA were consecutively enrolled. Patients used a wearable device preoperatively and 90 days postoperatively to track five previously-validated measures of sleep. Each month, they rated their sleep quality. Wearable sleep data was correlated with patient-reported sleep quality using a point biserial correlation test. Categorical data were compared using Chi-square tests. A total of 110 patients were included. Results: Preoperatively, 20.8% of patients reported “fairly bad” or “very bad” sleep; this increased to 44.4% 30 days postoperatively, then decreased to 26.5% 60 days postoperatively, and to 20.2% 90 days postoperatively. At 30 days postoperatively, time in bed, time asleep, and minutes of rapid eye movement sleep weakly correlated with patient-reported sleep quality (correlations 0.356, 0.345, and 0.345, respectively; P < .001). Sleep quality did not correlate with any wearable metric collected 60 or 90 days postoperatively. Conclusions: Patient-reported sleep quality following TKA initially worsened postoperatively, then improved to preoperative levels by 90 days. Time in bed, time asleep, and rapid eye movement sleep minutes only weakly correlated with patient-reported sleep quality at 30 days; no other correlations were detected. Surgeons that utilize remote monitoring following TKA should be aware that surrogate measures generated from these devices may correlate weakly, if at all, with the patient-reported outcome of the parameter being studied.
AB - Background: Sleep disturbances are common after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Despite the rising popularity of wearables to track sleep, little evidence exists in the arthroplasty literature regarding their efficacy. We aimed to correlate validated wearable sleep metrics with patient-reported sleep quality following TKA. Methods: Patients undergoing primary TKA were consecutively enrolled. Patients used a wearable device preoperatively and 90 days postoperatively to track five previously-validated measures of sleep. Each month, they rated their sleep quality. Wearable sleep data was correlated with patient-reported sleep quality using a point biserial correlation test. Categorical data were compared using Chi-square tests. A total of 110 patients were included. Results: Preoperatively, 20.8% of patients reported “fairly bad” or “very bad” sleep; this increased to 44.4% 30 days postoperatively, then decreased to 26.5% 60 days postoperatively, and to 20.2% 90 days postoperatively. At 30 days postoperatively, time in bed, time asleep, and minutes of rapid eye movement sleep weakly correlated with patient-reported sleep quality (correlations 0.356, 0.345, and 0.345, respectively; P < .001). Sleep quality did not correlate with any wearable metric collected 60 or 90 days postoperatively. Conclusions: Patient-reported sleep quality following TKA initially worsened postoperatively, then improved to preoperative levels by 90 days. Time in bed, time asleep, and rapid eye movement sleep minutes only weakly correlated with patient-reported sleep quality at 30 days; no other correlations were detected. Surgeons that utilize remote monitoring following TKA should be aware that surrogate measures generated from these devices may correlate weakly, if at all, with the patient-reported outcome of the parameter being studied.
KW - patient reported outcomes
KW - remote monitoring
KW - sleep disturbance
KW - total knee arthroplasty
KW - wearable devices
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85192995538&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.arth.2024.03.065
DO - 10.1016/j.arth.2024.03.065
M3 - Article
C2 - 38599526
AN - SCOPUS:85192995538
SN - 0883-5403
VL - 39
SP - S22-S26
JO - Journal of Arthroplasty
JF - Journal of Arthroplasty
IS - 8
ER -