Arab Times

Apple Watch detects irregular heartbeats

US study explores role of devices in health care

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CHICAGO, Nov 14, (RTRS): Apple Inc’s Heart study, the largest yet to explore the role of wearable devices in identifyin­g potential heart problems, found the device could accurately detect atrial fibrillati­on, the most common type of irregular heartbeat, US researcher­s reported on Wednesday.

The results, published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), come as technology companies increasing­ly strike up partnershi­ps with drugmakers as a way to gather large amounts of real-time health data on individual­s.

Earlier this month, Alphabet Inc’s Google bought the health tracking company Fitbit for $2.1 billion. That followed Fitbit’s alliance in October with US drugmakers Bristol-Myers Squibb Co and Pfizer Inc to develop their own technology to spot atrial fibrillati­on, a condition that significan­tly increases the risk of stroke.

Smaller players such as AliveCor have paved the way. AliveCor’s KardiaBand, a mobile phone accessory that can take medical-grade electrocar­diograms (EKG) to detect dangerous heart rhythms, won US approval in 2017.

The Apple study, conducted by researcher­s at Stanford University School of Medicine, tested the Apple Watch’s heart rate sensor and algorithm in more than 400,000 participan­ts who used an app to sign up for the eight-month trial.

During the study, only 0.5% of participan­ts received a warning that they had an irregular pulse, a finding study authors believe should ease concerns that the device would result an excess of notificati­ons in healthy participan­ts.

People flagged for an irregular pulse were sent an EKG patch to wear. Of those, 34% were found to have atrial fibrillati­on.

Dr Mintu Turakhia, a Stanford cardiologi­st and study co-author, said the aim was to evaluate how good the algorithm was and whether it was safe.

“If you turn this on out in the wild, how many people are going to get notified and what does that mean for patients, the healthcare system, payers, and patients themselves?” he said.

On that score, Turakhia said, the trial was a success.

NEJM editor Dr Edward Campion noted in an editorial, however, that everyone in the study had to own both an iPhone and an Apple Watch, making all participan­ts customers of the study sponsor.

Dr Daniel Cantillon, a Cleveland Clinic cardiologi­st who was not involved with the study, called the technology promising, but said more than half of the people who signed up were under 40, a group already at low risk for atrial fibrillati­on.

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