Validity of activity monitors in health and chronic disease: a systematic review

<p>Abstract</p> <p>The assessment of physical activity in healthy populations and in those with chronic diseases is challenging. The aim of this systematic review was to identify whether available activity monitors (AM) have been appropriately validated for use in assessing physica...

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Main Authors: Van Remoortel Hans, Giavedoni Santiago, Raste Yogini, Burtin Chris, Louvaris Zafeiris, Gimeno-Santos Elena, Langer Daniel, Glendenning Alastair, Hopkinson Nicholas S, Vogiatzis Ioannis, Peterson Barry T, Wilson Frederick, Mann Bridget, Rabinovich Roberto, Puhan Milo A, Troosters Thierry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-07-01
Series:International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijbnpa.org/content/9/1/84
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spelling doaj-ba30b6e43f864fcb95b26d3887f0aa302020-11-24T20:55:01ZengBMCInternational Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity1479-58682012-07-01918410.1186/1479-5868-9-84Validity of activity monitors in health and chronic disease: a systematic reviewVan Remoortel HansGiavedoni SantiagoRaste YoginiBurtin ChrisLouvaris ZafeirisGimeno-Santos ElenaLanger DanielGlendenning AlastairHopkinson Nicholas SVogiatzis IoannisPeterson Barry TWilson FrederickMann BridgetRabinovich RobertoPuhan Milo ATroosters Thierry<p>Abstract</p> <p>The assessment of physical activity in healthy populations and in those with chronic diseases is challenging. The aim of this systematic review was to identify whether available activity monitors (AM) have been appropriately validated for use in assessing physical activity in these groups. Following a systematic literature search we found 134 papers meeting the inclusion criteria; 40 conducted in a field setting (validation against doubly labelled water), 86 in a laboratory setting (validation against a metabolic cart, metabolic chamber) and 8 in a field and laboratory setting. Correlation coefficients between AM outcomes and energy expenditure (EE) by the criterion method (doubly labelled water and metabolic cart/chamber) and percentage mean differences between EE estimation from the monitor and EE measurement by the criterion method were extracted. Random-effects meta-analyses were performed to pool the results across studies where possible. Types of devices were compared using meta-regression analyses. Most validation studies had been performed in healthy adults (n = 118), with few carried out in patients with chronic diseases (n = 16). For total EE, correlation coefficients were statistically significantly lower in uniaxial compared to multisensor devices. For active EE, correlations were slightly but not significantly lower in uniaxial compared to triaxial and multisensor devices. Uniaxial devices tended to underestimate TEE (−12.07 (95%CI; -18.28 to −5.85) %) compared to triaxial (−6.85 (95%CI; -18.20 to 4.49) %, p = 0.37) and were statistically significantly less accurate than multisensor devices (−3.64 (95%CI; -8.97 to 1.70) %, p<0.001). TEE was underestimated during slow walking speeds in 69% of the lab validation studies compared to 37%, 30% and 37% of the studies during intermediate, fast walking speed and running, respectively. The high level of heterogeneity in the validation studies is only partly explained by the type of activity monitor and the activity monitor outcome. Triaxial and multisensor devices tend to be more valid monitors. Since activity monitors are less accurate at slow walking speeds and information about validated activity monitors in chronic disease populations is lacking, proper validation studies in these populations are needed prior to their inclusion in clinical trials.</p> http://www.ijbnpa.org/content/9/1/84Chronic diseasesDoubly labelled waterIndirect calorimetryActivity monitoringPhysical activityValidation studySystematic review
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Van Remoortel Hans
Giavedoni Santiago
Raste Yogini
Burtin Chris
Louvaris Zafeiris
Gimeno-Santos Elena
Langer Daniel
Glendenning Alastair
Hopkinson Nicholas S
Vogiatzis Ioannis
Peterson Barry T
Wilson Frederick
Mann Bridget
Rabinovich Roberto
Puhan Milo A
Troosters Thierry
spellingShingle Van Remoortel Hans
Giavedoni Santiago
Raste Yogini
Burtin Chris
Louvaris Zafeiris
Gimeno-Santos Elena
Langer Daniel
Glendenning Alastair
Hopkinson Nicholas S
Vogiatzis Ioannis
Peterson Barry T
Wilson Frederick
Mann Bridget
Rabinovich Roberto
Puhan Milo A
Troosters Thierry
Validity of activity monitors in health and chronic disease: a systematic review
International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
Chronic diseases
Doubly labelled water
Indirect calorimetry
Activity monitoring
Physical activity
Validation study
Systematic review
author_facet Van Remoortel Hans
Giavedoni Santiago
Raste Yogini
Burtin Chris
Louvaris Zafeiris
Gimeno-Santos Elena
Langer Daniel
Glendenning Alastair
Hopkinson Nicholas S
Vogiatzis Ioannis
Peterson Barry T
Wilson Frederick
Mann Bridget
Rabinovich Roberto
Puhan Milo A
Troosters Thierry
author_sort Van Remoortel Hans
title Validity of activity monitors in health and chronic disease: a systematic review
title_short Validity of activity monitors in health and chronic disease: a systematic review
title_full Validity of activity monitors in health and chronic disease: a systematic review
title_fullStr Validity of activity monitors in health and chronic disease: a systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Validity of activity monitors in health and chronic disease: a systematic review
title_sort validity of activity monitors in health and chronic disease: a systematic review
publisher BMC
series International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
issn 1479-5868
publishDate 2012-07-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>The assessment of physical activity in healthy populations and in those with chronic diseases is challenging. The aim of this systematic review was to identify whether available activity monitors (AM) have been appropriately validated for use in assessing physical activity in these groups. Following a systematic literature search we found 134 papers meeting the inclusion criteria; 40 conducted in a field setting (validation against doubly labelled water), 86 in a laboratory setting (validation against a metabolic cart, metabolic chamber) and 8 in a field and laboratory setting. Correlation coefficients between AM outcomes and energy expenditure (EE) by the criterion method (doubly labelled water and metabolic cart/chamber) and percentage mean differences between EE estimation from the monitor and EE measurement by the criterion method were extracted. Random-effects meta-analyses were performed to pool the results across studies where possible. Types of devices were compared using meta-regression analyses. Most validation studies had been performed in healthy adults (n = 118), with few carried out in patients with chronic diseases (n = 16). For total EE, correlation coefficients were statistically significantly lower in uniaxial compared to multisensor devices. For active EE, correlations were slightly but not significantly lower in uniaxial compared to triaxial and multisensor devices. Uniaxial devices tended to underestimate TEE (−12.07 (95%CI; -18.28 to −5.85) %) compared to triaxial (−6.85 (95%CI; -18.20 to 4.49) %, p = 0.37) and were statistically significantly less accurate than multisensor devices (−3.64 (95%CI; -8.97 to 1.70) %, p<0.001). TEE was underestimated during slow walking speeds in 69% of the lab validation studies compared to 37%, 30% and 37% of the studies during intermediate, fast walking speed and running, respectively. The high level of heterogeneity in the validation studies is only partly explained by the type of activity monitor and the activity monitor outcome. Triaxial and multisensor devices tend to be more valid monitors. Since activity monitors are less accurate at slow walking speeds and information about validated activity monitors in chronic disease populations is lacking, proper validation studies in these populations are needed prior to their inclusion in clinical trials.</p>
topic Chronic diseases
Doubly labelled water
Indirect calorimetry
Activity monitoring
Physical activity
Validation study
Systematic review
url http://www.ijbnpa.org/content/9/1/84
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