Wearable technologies are increasingly integrated into digital health systems to support continuous remote monitoring in oncology; however, the lack of standardized and reproducible criteria for device selection limits their scalable and regulation-compliant adoption in clinically oriented infrastructures. This study proposes a preclinical benchmarking framework for the systematic evaluation of commercially available wearable devices for oncology applications. Devices were assessed across six predefined dimensions: biometric data acquisition, application programming interface-based interoperability, regulatory compliance, battery autonomy, cost, and absence of mandatory subscription fees. From an initial pool of 23 devices, a stepwise screening process identified 6 eligible wearables, which were compared using a semi-quantitative weighted scoring system. The benchmarking analysis identified the Withings ScanWatch 2 as the highest-ranked device, achieving a score of 37/40 and representing the only solution combining medical-grade certification for selected functions, extended battery life (up to 30 days), declared General Data Protection Regulation-compliant data governance, and fully accessible application programming interfaces. The remaining devices scored between 17 and 23 due to limitations in certification, battery autonomy, or data accessibility. This work introduces a reproducible preclinical benchmarking methodology that supports transparent wearable device selection in oncology and provides a foundation for future scalable digital health integration under appropriate regulatory and interoperability governance.

A Benchmarking Framework for Cost-Effective Wearables in Oncology: Supporting Remote Monitoring and Scalable Digital Health Integration / Bindi B.; Garofano M.; Parretti C.; Pascarelli C.; Arcidiacono G.; Bandinelli R.; Corallo A.. - In: TECHNOLOGIES. - ISSN 2227-7080. - STAMPA. - 14:(2026), pp. 24.1-24.15. [10.3390/technologies14010024]

A Benchmarking Framework for Cost-Effective Wearables in Oncology: Supporting Remote Monitoring and Scalable Digital Health Integration

Bindi B.;Parretti C.;Arcidiacono G.;Bandinelli R.;Corallo A.
2026

Abstract

Wearable technologies are increasingly integrated into digital health systems to support continuous remote monitoring in oncology; however, the lack of standardized and reproducible criteria for device selection limits their scalable and regulation-compliant adoption in clinically oriented infrastructures. This study proposes a preclinical benchmarking framework for the systematic evaluation of commercially available wearable devices for oncology applications. Devices were assessed across six predefined dimensions: biometric data acquisition, application programming interface-based interoperability, regulatory compliance, battery autonomy, cost, and absence of mandatory subscription fees. From an initial pool of 23 devices, a stepwise screening process identified 6 eligible wearables, which were compared using a semi-quantitative weighted scoring system. The benchmarking analysis identified the Withings ScanWatch 2 as the highest-ranked device, achieving a score of 37/40 and representing the only solution combining medical-grade certification for selected functions, extended battery life (up to 30 days), declared General Data Protection Regulation-compliant data governance, and fully accessible application programming interfaces. The remaining devices scored between 17 and 23 due to limitations in certification, battery autonomy, or data accessibility. This work introduces a reproducible preclinical benchmarking methodology that supports transparent wearable device selection in oncology and provides a foundation for future scalable digital health integration under appropriate regulatory and interoperability governance.
2026
14
1
15
Bindi B.; Garofano M.; Parretti C.; Pascarelli C.; Arcidiacono G.; Bandinelli R.; Corallo A.
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/1452337
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