Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Global Open (Oct 2019)

The Performance of Patient-Worn Actigraphy Devices to Measure Recovery after Breast Reconstruction

  • Jenna M Thuman, BS,
  • Heather McMahon, MD,
  • Philip Chow, PhD,
  • Matthew Gerber, PhD,
  • Kasandra Dassoulas, MD,
  • Laura Barnes, PhD,
  • Chris A Campbell, MD FACS

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/GOX.0000000000002503
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 10
p. e2503

Abstract

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Introduction:. Annually, over 250,000 women are diagnosed with breast cancer with over one-third undergoing mastectomy and contemplating reconstruction. Surgical breast reconstructive options vary in post-operative recovery, yet with a paucity of objective data to inform women of their expected recovery after flap or implant-based reconstruction. As a result, patient decision-making is based primarily on surgeon preference and subjective data regarding perceived invasiveness of surgical options. This study aims to identify recovery outcomes of interest to breast cancer patients and to determine the feasibility of objectively measuring patient recovery after mastectomy and reconstruction using patient-worn actigraphy devices. Methods:. Three survivorship focus groups for patients after mastectomy with and without reconstruction were used to identify recovery outcomes they considered relevant. Cloud storage systems and actigraphy devices were piloted to determine performance. Actigraphy devices were worn by patients peri-operatively to measure post-operative sleep quality and steps taken, normalized to individual patient pre-operative control data. Results:. Focus groups identified sleep quality, return to activity (measurable with actigraphy), and driving as variables impacting surgical decision-making. We prospectively measured outcomes for four women undergoing immediate pre-pectoral tissue expander placement and four women undergoing immediate free flap reconstruction. Actigraphy data demonstrated an initial decrease in activity, increase in sleep variability and increased heart rate that approached the patients’ pre-operative normalized data as they recovered over time. Conclusions:. These data demonstrate that actigraphy data would be of interest to patients making breast reconstruction decisions and that the data can be successfully collected to inform decision-making.