Design and methods of the Apple Women’s Health Study: a digital longitudinal cohort study

Prospective longitudinal cohorts assessing women’s health and gynecologic conditions have historically been limited. The Apple Women’s Health Study was designed to gain a deeper understanding of the relationship among menstrual cycles, health, and behavior. This paper describes the design and method...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of obstetrics and gynecology 2022-04, Vol.226 (4), p.545.e1-545.e29
Hauptverfasser: Mahalingaiah, Shruthi, Fruh, Victoria, Rodriguez, Erika, Konanki, Sai Charan, Onnela, Jukka-Pekka, de Figueiredo Veiga, Alexis, Lyons, Genevieve, Ahmed, Rowana, Li, Huichu, Gallagher, Nicola, Jukic, Anne Marie Z., Ferguson, Kelly K., Baird, Donna D., Wilcox, Allen J., Curry, Christine L., Suharwardy, Sanaa, Fischer-Colbrie, Tyler, Agrawal, Gracee, Coull, Brent A., Hauser, Russ, Williams, Michelle A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Prospective longitudinal cohorts assessing women’s health and gynecologic conditions have historically been limited. The Apple Women’s Health Study was designed to gain a deeper understanding of the relationship among menstrual cycles, health, and behavior. This paper describes the design and methods of the ongoing Apple Women’s Health Study and provides the demographic characteristics of the first 10,000 participants. This was a mobile-application-based longitudinal cohort study involving survey and sensor-based data. We collected the data from 10,000 participants who responded to the demographics survey on enrollment between November 14, 2019 and May 20, 2020. The participants were asked to complete a monthly follow-up through November 2020. The eligibility included installed Apple Research app on their iPhone with iOS version 13.2 or later, were living in the United States, being of age greater than 18 years (19 in Alabama and Nebraska, 21 years old in Puerto Rico), were comfortable in communicating in written and spoken English, were the sole user of an iCloud account or iPhone, and were willing to provide consent to participate in the study. The mean age at enrollment was 33.6 years old (±standard deviation, 10.3). The race and ethnicity was representative of the US population (69% White and Non-Hispanic [6910/10,000]), whereas 51% (5089/10,000) had a college education or above. The participant geographic distribution included all the US states and Puerto Rico. Seventy-two percent (7223/10,000) reported the use of an Apple Watch, and 24.4% (2438/10,000) consented to sensor-based data collection. For this cohort, 38% (3490/9238) did not respond to the Monthly Survey: Menstrual Update after enrollment. At the 6-month follow-up, there was a 35% (3099/8972) response rate to the Monthly Survey: Menstrual Update. 82.7% (8266/10,000) of the initial cohort and 95.1% (2948/3099) of the participants who responded to month 6 of the Monthly Survey: Menstrual Update tracked at least 1 menstrual cycle via HealthKit. The participants tracked their menstrual bleeding days for an average of 4.44 (25%–75%; range, 3–6) calendar months during the study period. Non-White participants were slightly more likely to drop out than White participants; those remaining at 6 months were otherwise similar in demographic characteristics to the original enrollment group. The first 10,000 participants of the Apple Women’s Health Study were recruited via the Research app and were diver
ISSN:0002-9378
1097-6868
DOI:10.1016/j.ajog.2021.09.041