At a glance
ClinicalIndex Comparison RecordStandardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.
A Multicenter, Open-Label, Two-Arm Study to Evaluate the Impact of Using Wearable Devices in Addition to Standard Clinical Practice on Parkinson´s Subject Symptoms Management
In Brief
A Phase 4 clinical trial evaluating Kinesia-ONE™, Kinesia-360™, and 1 other intervention for Parkinson´s Disease. Completed, enrolled 40 participants across 8 sites.
Detailed Summary
Evaluate the benefits of Kinesia-360™ wearable technology in addition to standard clinical practice on improving Parkinson´s disease motor symptoms, Neupro dosing regimen and adherence to Neupro compared with only standard clinical practice.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Kinesia-ONE™ wearable sensor uses a subject-worn finger sensor and iPad mini application (APP) to objectively measure specific motor tasks related to Parkinson's disease symptoms such as tremor, bradykinesia (slowed movements), and dyskinesia (involuntary movements) in the Investigator's office. Subjects should wear the Kinesia-ONE™ device on the most affected side.
Kinesia-360™ wearable sensor includes a wrist and ankle device, along with a cell phone, which is also APP-based, and is designed for continuous day time monitoring of Parkinson's disease symptoms. Subjects will wear Kinesia-360™ while they go about their daily lives, and symptom severity is continually captured to enable objective assessment of Parkinson's disease symptoms. Subjects should wear the Kinesia-360™ device bands on the most affected side.
All subjects will start Neupro treatment at a dose of either rotigotine 2 mg/24 h or 4 mg/24 h (according to the disease stage of the subject) which will then be adjusted based on symptom assessment either via standard care alone or via a combination of standard care and evaluation of the recordings made available by the Kinesia wearable technologies.