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A Digital Health Solution for Child Growth Monitoring at Home: Testing the Accuracy of a Novel "GrowthMonitor" Smartphone Application to Detect Abnormal Height and Body Mass Indices.

Thaventhiran, T; Orr, J; Morris, JK; Hsu, A; Martin, L; Davies, KM; Harding, V; Chapple, P; Dunkel, L; Storr, HL (2023) A Digital Health Solution for Child Growth Monitoring at Home: Testing the Accuracy of a Novel "GrowthMonitor" Smartphone Application to Detect Abnormal Height and Body Mass Indices. Mayo Clin Proc Digit Health, 1 (4). pp. 498-509. ISSN 2949-7612 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mcpdig.2023.08.001
SGUL Authors: Morris, Joan Katherine

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To develop and evaluate a smartphone application that accurately measures height and provides notifications when abnormalities are detected. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A total of 145 (75 boys) participants with a mean age ± SD of 8.7±4.5 years (range, 1.0-17.0 years), from the Children's Hospital at Barts Health Trust, London, United Kingdom, were enrolled in the study. "GrowthMonitor" (UCL Creatives) iPhone application (GMA) measures height using augmented reality. Using population-based (UK-WHO) references, algorithms calculated height SD score (HSDS), distance from target height (THSDSDEV), and HSDS change over time (ΔHSDS). Pre-established thresholds discriminated normal/abnormal growth. The GMA and a stadiometer (Harpenden; gold standard) measured standing heights of children at routine clinic visits. A subset of parents used GMA to measure their child's height at home. Outcome targets were 95% of GMA measurements within ±0.5 SDS of the stadiometer and the correct identification of abnormal HSDS, THSDSDEV, and ΔHSDS. RESULTS: Bland-Altman plots revealed no appreciable bias in differences between paired study team GMA and stadiometer height measurements, with a mean of the differences of 0.11 cm with 95% limits of agreement of -2.21 to 2.42 cm. There was no evidence of greater bias occurring for either shorter/younger children or taller/older children. The 2 methods of measurements were highly correlated (R=0.999). GrowthMonitor iPhone application measurements performed by parents in clinic and at home were slightly less accurate. The κ coefficient indicated reliable and consistent agreement of flag alerts for HSDS (κ=0.74) and THSDSDEV (κ=0.88) between 83 paired GMA and stadiometer measurements. GrowthMonitor iPhone application yielded a detection rate of 96% and 97% for HSDS-based and THSDSDEV-based red flags, respectively. Forty-two (18 boys) participants had GMA calculated ΔHSDS using an additional height measurement 6-16 months later, and no abnormal flag alerts were triggered for ΔHSDS values. CONCLUSION: GrowthMonitor iPhone application provides the potential for parents/carers and health care professionals to capture serial height measurements at home and without specialized equipment. Reliable interpretation and flagging of abnormal measurements indicate the potential of this technology to transform childhood growth monitoring.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: © 2023 THE AUTHORS. Published by Elsevier Inc on behalf of Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
SGUL Research Institute / Research Centre: Academic Structure > Population Health Research Institute (INPH)
Journal or Publication Title: Mayo Clin Proc Digit Health
ISSN: 2949-7612
Language: eng
Dates:
DateEvent
December 2023Published
Publisher License: Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0
Projects:
Project IDFunderFunder ID
NIHR300098National Institute for Health and Care Researchhttp://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000272
MRC0254Barts Charityhttp://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100015652
PubMed ID: 38169882
Go to PubMed abstract
URI: https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/116003
Publisher's version: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mcpdig.2023.08.001

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