Asthma
Remotely monitor cough and wheeze in asthma patients with the RESP® Biosensor
The RESP® Biosensor: An FDA-Cleared Wearable for Monitoring Wheeze and Cough in Asthma
- Clinically validated accuracy, with equivalent performance to Littman 3200 stethoscope.
- Continuous monitoring of cough and lung sounds such as wheeze to offer quantitative data on respiratory symptoms in daily life.
- Patient-friendly, reduces the burden on patients while improving clinician efficiency.
Initial results from the study which took place at Ann & Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago showed positive feedback from patients and families as well as strong accuracy in detecting wheeze compared to physician auscultation.
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Continuous Monitoring Versus Intermittent Auscultation of Wheezes
Healthcare Settings
Manage lung health from hospital to home with real-time monitoring of symptoms
Life Sciences
Gain greater, objective insight into subject treatment response in clinical trials
Expert Overread and Data Reporting
- Smart Reporting in Action: Our respiratory experts, trained annotators, and machine learning algorithms work in tandem to analyze cloud-uploaded patient cough and lung sound results with exceptional clinical accuracy.
- Efficiency and Accuracy: Streamlined data annotation with our proprietary algorithms accelerates insights and optimizes research budgets, maintaining the integrity of every dataset.
Cough
Wheeze
Crackles
Clinical Validation
Is the RESP® Biosensor reimbursable?
The RESP® Biosensor is reimbursable under RPM and RTM codes.
Is the RESP® Biosensor designed for continuous long-term monitoring?
Yes. The RESP® Biosensor was designed for long-term, continuous remote monitoring with the goal of detecting changes in lung sounds passively ranging from 4 – 24 hours per day.
Which care settings is the RESP® Biosensor intended for?
The RESP® Biosensor is designed to be used across multiple care settings, including clinical trials, in-patient, transitional care, post-acute discharge, outpatient, and hospital at home.
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References
- Wang, Z., Li, Y., Gao, Y., Fu, Y., Lin, J., Lei, X., Zheng, J., & Jiang, M. (2023). Global, regional, and national burden of asthma and its attributable risk factors from 1990 to 2019: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019. Respiratory research, 24(1), 169. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12931-023-02475-6
- Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America. Asthma Facts and Figures [Internet] Available at https://aafa.org/asthma/asthma-facts/
- NHS. Asthma Attacks [Internet]. https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/asthma/asthma-attack/