A MULTIFACETED DIGITAL HEALTH PLATFORM TO ADVANCE ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE PATIENT MONITORING, SAFETY, CARE, AND RESEARCH.

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R43 · $495,787 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) and AD-Related Dementias (ADRD) are projected to affect 50 million Americans by 2050. In 2019, more than 16 million Americans struggled while providing unpaid care for people with AD/ADRD and they need stigma-free solutions to help remotely monitor challenging AD/ADRD behaviors like falling and wandering. Separate but related, many AD/ADRD clinical trials are siloed and require patient volunteers and their caregivers to travel to in-person appointments. This is burdensome for families, increases the cost to conduct studies, and data collected is often non-representative of daily life. Amissa Inc. has developed a stigma- free, prototype solution to significantly advance AD/ADRD patient monitoring, safety, and caregiving while simultaneously aggregating high-frequency digital biomarkers to advance medical research. Several competitors have developed hardware devices for tracking elderly individuals who wander and/or fall however, AD/ADRD patients express feelings of stress, anxiety, humiliation, burden, and stigma associated with dementia when wearing these “special” devices. AD/ADRD caregivers seek “socially-acceptable” devices that improve health and location monitoring, provide peace of mind, reduce worry, improve patient safety and quality of life without loved ones feeling shame or embarrassment. Amissa’s prototype software application, created for widely available, consumer-grade smartwatches, enables families to remotely monitor when loved ones fall inside or outside the home and help prevent dangerous wandering episodes. Our initial software application also sends emergency push notifications to key stakeholders when loved ones exhibit uncommon behaviors (e.g. sudden change in variable heart rate). This Phase I SBIR proposal is designed to develop a platform which passively and unobtrusively collects time-based behavioral and biometric data from AD/ADRD patient smartwatches in real-life settings to improve caregiving while also establishing a high-frequency cloud database where one does not currently exist for AD/ADRD research. Aim 1 will develop a caregiver-designed AD/ADRD patient monitoring application for off-the-shelf consumer smartwatches and conduct user-experience and user-interface testing to facilitate feedback for iterative product design improvement. Utilizing opt-in user data from Amissa’s caregiver monitoring application, Aim 2 will establish a novel high-frequency behavioral and biometric cloud database to advance AD/ADRD digital biomarker research capabilities to predict patient falls an wandering. Amissa’s project intends to enable faster collection of multimodal data via broader demographic populations to advance AD/ADRD medical research. This Phase I SBIR has the potential for high impact by providing a single, low-cost, digital technology solution to improve AD/ADRD patient care and safety while reducing stress for caregivers and families. Furthermore, this research will improve c...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10325493
Project number
1R43AG072981-01A1
Recipient
AMISSA, INC.
Principal Investigator
Jon Andrew Corkey
Activity code
R43
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$495,787
Award type
1
Project period
2021-09-01 → 2023-08-31