Gait Analysis Parameter and Upper Limb Evaluation in Adult Patients With Neurological or Metabolic Pathology
brief summary
The ActiLiège-Adult study is a prospective, longitudinal, observational study designed to collect natural history data on adult patients with neurological or metabolic diseases affecting movement. Conducted at the Centre de Référence Liégeois des Maladies Neuromusculaires in Liège, Belgium, the study will enroll 300 ambulant patients, including individuals with neuromuscular disorders and obesity. Using the Syde® wearable device, the study aims to continuously monitor motor function in real-life settings over a period of up to two years. The primary objective is to evaluate the utility of digital mobility outcomes, such as the 95th centile of stride velocity (SV95C), as reliable and objective endpoints for future clinical trials.
detailed description
Following the qualification of the 95th centile of stride velocity (SV95C) as a primary digital endpoint in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), there is growing interest in extending such digital assessments to other neurological and metabolic diseases that impair movement. Traditional in-clinic functional tests (e.g., 6-minute walk test, 10-meter walk/run) provide only limited snapshots of motor ability and are influenced by external factors such as motivation and fatigue. Similarly, motor function scales and biomarkers, while useful, often lack objectivity or established clinical relevance.
The ActiLiège-Adult study aims to address these limitations by leveraging the Syde® device, a wearable magneto-inertial sensor worn on the wrist and/or ankle, to continuously monitor motor activity in daily life. This device has been previously validated in DMD and other neuromuscular conditions and has been used in both interventional and natural history studies.
This academic study will enroll 300 ambulant adult patients, including 220 with neurological diseases and 20 with obesity, with a minimum of 20 patients per disease type. Ambulation is defined as the ability to walk 10 meters unaided. Patients who lose ambulation during the study will continue to be followed with adapted assessments.
Participants will be monitored for up to two years (six months for diseases affecting the neuromuscular junction). Standardized clinical assessments-including timed tests, motor function evaluations, and strength measurements-will be conducted at baseline and every six months. These will be compared with continuous data collected by the Syde® device. Additionally, patients will complete a Patient Global Impression of Change (PGI-C) questionnaire every six months.
The study's goal is to generate robust, real-world data to support the development of objective, sensitive, and clinically meaningful digital endpoints for use in future therapeutic trials targeting movement disorders.