NEW HEALTH TECH WEARABLES AT CES MEASURE BLOOD SUGAR, CAPTURE HEART MURMURS

MindMics' earbuds and DexCom's Stelo patches stand out at CES 2025, while an expert calls the approval process for such devices 'pathetic'

Wearable devices have come a long way from counting steps or heartbeats, with new tech offering the ability to track blood oxygenation, glucose levels and blood pressure - though its reliability remains a matter of debate.

Some of the most cutting-edge products are on display at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.

Almost 10 years since the debut of the Apple Watch, the global market for "trackers" - watches, bracelets and other bands - is valued at around US$60 billion, according to several firms, and is expected to exceed US$100 billion by the end of the 2020s.

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"Before smartwatches, no one was thinking about heart-rate monitoring," said Anna Barnacka, CEO and president of health-tech start-up MindMics. "Today, everyone is quite aware about how important it is."

MindMics says its headphones use wave-based technology to offer a complete analysis of cardiac activity - including the condition and function of heart valves.

"You can look at your heart with the precision of a medical device," Barnacka said.

In clinical trials, Barnacka said, the device was able to capture a murmur in a patient with aortic stenosis, which is the narrowing of a heart valve.

Currently, diagnosing aortic stenosis requires multiple tests, including inserting a probe into an artery.

Another wearable product at CES is Stelo, by California-based start-up DexCom. Stelo is the first non-prescription wearable patch capable of continuously measuring blood sugar levels.

Such patches have typically been reserved for diabetics, but Stelo will be available even "if you have prediabetes, or if you're just interested in understanding how different food impacts your body", said DexCom chief operating officer Jake Leach.

The US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that 100 million Americans have prediabetes - elevated blood sugar levels that are below the threshold for diabetes.

"The vast majority of them don't know they have prediabetes because they haven't had the testing," Leach said.

Other latest-generation devices can detect sleep apnoea, take blood pressure readings or report cardiac arrhythmia.

Still, part of the medical and scientific community is sceptical about the data collected by these wearables.

"I'm sure some of these products are beneficial, so I don't want to sound like I'm doubting all of them, but the approval process is honestly pathetic," said Diana Zuckerman, president of the US National Centre for Health Research.

This was a reference to the validation protocol of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which has authority on the subject.

Connected devices "are not tested as rigorously" as drugs, Zuckerman said.

"The only way I could tell whether the quality of the data are improving is if it were being made publicly available in a way that somebody like me could evaluate," Zuckerman said, adding that this was not generally the case.

Some devices, such as those from DexCom and MindMics, have nevertheless been the subject of independent studies by doctors and researchers, who have recognised their effectiveness for certain parameters.

Tammy Brady, a professor at Johns Hopkins University in the US who specialises in hypertension in children, is cautious about the results produced by bracelets, watches and other connected rings.

"Ideally, it would be great to have blood pressure information for a growing number of people, but for the time being, they're too approximate to use reliably," she said.

As a member of a committee on blood pressure monitors, Brady works with the International Organization for Standardization, the originator of the ISO standards.

"We hope that once ISO standards for cuffless blood pressure are set, it will help manufacturers and the FDA to rigorously test their reliability," she said.

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This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (www.scmp.com), the leading news media reporting on China and Asia.

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2025-01-12T10:56:47Z