DZNE and Aparito develop mobile app to assess ataxia symptoms at home

15 January 2021 , Deutsches Zentrum für Neurodegenerative Erkrankungen e.V. (DZNE, the German Centre for Neurodegenerative Diseases) and Aparito (a Welsh and Dutch based med-tech company) today announce their collaboration agreement to co-develop a means for patients to record their own severity of ataxia by using a simplified and shorter SARA version in a video-recordable manner at home.

Prof. Dr. Thomas Klockgether, Director of Clinical Research at the DZNE, was instrumental in the development of the Scale for the Assessment and Rating of Ataxia (SARA) scale as a reliable and valid scale to measure the severity of ataxia, tested in 5 trials including >600 patients with ataxias. It includes eight different domains to measure gait, stance, nose-finger test, finger chase, hand movement and speech which is assessed by clinicians within the hospital. The DZNE has transferred the SARA into a disease score used by patients outside of hospital settings (“SARAhome”). It includes a reduced number of domains and follows a standardised order and video instruction guide for patients to follow.

Benefit of the collaboration

The collaboration is about the development and further assessment of a new app displaying the SARAhome scale within Aparito’s flagship software platform Atom5. This way SARAhome is made available to patients on iOS and Android and is currently available in English, German, Dutch and Portuguese. Throughout the cooperation It will be rolled out in multiple study sites in Europe, including the DZNE in Bonn, and Melbourne Australia over the coming months.

A main benefit of the SARAhome app is that it enables a close monitoring of Ataxia symptoms within a significantly brief period of time: Ataxia symptoms can be highly variable within a single day, from day-to-day and week to week. Travel to clinical sites can be stressful and time consuming for patients, also impacting on a patient’s performance while being assessed and often leading to missed insight of disease variability.

A recent publication by Dr Marcus Grobe-Einsler et al (2020) in the Journal Movement Disorders demonstrated the validity and feasibility of SARAhome. First data from home application suggests that fluctuations in severity of ataxia exceed the expected range.

Dr Elin Haf Davies, Aparito CEO stated, “We are highly honoured to enter into this collaborative agreement with DZNE. They are highly regarded for their clinical and academic credibility and we very much look forward to extending the availability of SARAhome to patients globally.”

Prof. Dr. Thomas Klockgether, Director Clinical Research at the DZNE: “Our Collaboration with Aparito resulted in the development of a new assessment tool that will be of enormous relevance for future trials and patient care.”

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE)

The DZNE investigates all aspects of neurodegenerative diseases (such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases and Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) in order to develop novel approaches of prevention, treatment, and health care. The DZNE is comprised of ten sites across Germany and cooperates closely with universities, university hospitals, and other institutions on a national and international level. The DZNE is a member of the Helmholtz Association. Website: www.dzne.de/en Twitter: @DZNE_de:

Media relations

Guido Ening - DZNE, Communications

E-Mail: guido.ening@dzne.de

Tel: +49 228 43302 263

Aparito

Aparito provides innovative, patient-centric drug development solutions, integrating specialist clinical and regulatory knowledge with the technology to gather highly relevant patient-generated data outside of the hospital setting, to streamline the drug development process. We are transforming healthcare by unlocking real world patient data through mobile apps and wearable devices.

Website: www.aparito.com

Twitter: @aparitohealth

Media relations

Rosemary Mortimer - Aparito

E-Mail: rosemary.mortimer@aparito.com

Tel: +44 1978 896 191

Notes to Editors

This collaboration is significant as it will allow patients who have Ataxia in the UK/Germany/Netherlands/Portugal and Australia the opportunity to video themselves and record their health data from home via the Aparito app without the need to visit a clinical site to be monitored. It will assist future clinical trials and alleviate the burden on the patient on having to travel to clinical sites.

The data will be managed and interpreted by clinicians and will allow them to identify any changes in the patients health.


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