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Article Abstract

Background: After a lower-extremity fracture, the patient's priority is to regain function. To date, our ability to measure function has been limited. However, high-fidelity sensors in smartphones continuously measure mobility, providing an expansive pre- and post-injury gait history. We assessed whether pre-injury mobility data, combined with demographic and injury data, reliably predicted post-fracture mobility.

Methods: We enrolled 107 adult patients (mean age, 45 years; 43% female, 62% White, 36% Black, 1% Asian, 1% more than one race) ≥6 months after the surgical treatment of a lower-extremity fracture. Consenting patients exported their Apple iPhone mobility metrics, including step count, walking speed, step length, walking asymmetry, and double-support time. We integrated these mobility measures with demographic and injury data. Using nonlinear modeling, we assessed whether pre-injury mobility metrics combined with baseline data predicted post-fracture mobility.

Results: All models were well calibrated and had model fits ranging from an adjusted R 2 of 0.18 (walking asymmetry) to 0.61 (double-support time). Pre-injury function strongly predicted post-injury mobility in all models. After the injury, the average daily step count increased by 65 steps each week (95% confidence interval [CI], 56 to 75). Weekly gains were significantly greater within 6 weeks after the injury (92 daily steps per week; 95% CI, 58 to 127) than 20 to 26 weeks post-injury (19 daily steps per week; 95% CI, 11 to 27; p < 0.001). Greater pre-injury steps were associated with increased post-injury mobility (301 daily steps post-injury per 1,000 steps pre-injury; 95% CI, 235 to 367). Mean walking speed declined by 0.200 m/s (95% CI, -0.257 to -0.143) from injury to 8 weeks post-injury. From 12 to 26 weeks post-injury, the average walking speed increased by 0.071 m/s (95% CI, 0.044 to 0.097).

Conclusions: These proof-of-concept findings highlight the value of high-fidelity pre-injury mobility data in predicting recovery. Individualized recovery projections can provide patient-friendly counseling tools and useful clinical insight for surgeons.

Level Of Evidence: Prognostic Level III . See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12281417PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2106/JBJS.24.01305DOI Listing

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