Artificial Intelligence–Enabled Wearable Devices and Nocturnal Scratching in Mild Atopic Dermatitis
Clinical Summary
View sourceWhat was studied
Single-arm, within-participant, 2-week at-home study testing an AI-enabled hand-worn sensor that delivers closed-loop haptic feedback to reduce nocturnal scratching in adults with mild atopic dermatitis; 7 baseline nights (sensing only) followed by 7 nights with feedback.
Key findings
Among 10 adults (104 sleep nights; 831 monitoring hours), mean nightly scratch events fell from 45.6 to 32.8 (28%; P=.03) and scratch duration per hour of sleep opportunity fell from 15.8 seconds to 7.9 seconds (50%; P=.01) during the feedback week, with no reduction in total sleep opportunity and no loss to follow-up.
Study limitations
Pre–post, single-arm design without a control group and a small, single-center sample (n=10). Follow-up was only two weeks and participants had mild disease, limiting generalizability.
Clinical implications
An AI-enabled wearable with haptic feedback reduced nocturnal scratching over one week in adults with mild atopic dermatitis without shortening sleep; adoption should await confirmatory randomized trials.
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