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Concordance of wearable device sleep metrics with patient-reported sleep quality: A systematic review.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Srivali, N; Cheungpasitporn, W
Published in: Sleep Med
April 2, 2026

BACKGROUND: Commercial wearable devices increasingly monitor sleep, but their concordance with patient-reported sleep quality remains poorly characterized. This systematic review evaluates concordance between wearable sleep metrics and validated subjective measures. METHODS: Following PRISMA guidelines, we searched PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, and Cochrane Library through October 2025 for studies comparing consumer wrist-worn actigraphy-based devices with validated subjective sleep quality measures in adults (≥18 years). Two reviewers independently performed screening, extraction, and QUADAS-2 quality assessment. GRADE criteria evaluated evidence certainty. RESULTS: Five observational studies (2006 participants) were included. Wearable devices showed poor to moderate agreement with subjective assessments, explaining only 2.5-16.2% variance. Total sleep time moderately correlated with same-day diaries (r = 0.367), but devices failed to capture Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index scores. Agreement varied substantially by population: good sleepers showed 82.4% concordance versus 39.4% in insomnia patients (p = 0.006). Clinical populations and older adults demonstrated poor agreement. Polysomnography concordance was also poor: sleep efficiency showed fair intraclass correlation coefficient values (0.478-0.570) with systematic overestimation (+1.75% to +7.9%), sleep onset latency correlated poorly (r = 0.033), and wake after sleep onset was underestimated (-7 to -30 min). Evidence certainty ranged from low to moderate. CONCLUSIONS: Commercial wearable sleep trackers demonstrate poor to moderate agreement with validated subjective sleep quality measures, with significant population-specific variation. Device data should complement, not replace, validated subjective assessments, as current technology inadequately captures patient-reported sleep quality and shows systematic bias in objective parameters.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Sleep Med

DOI

EISSN

1878-5506

Publication Date

April 2, 2026

Volume

144

Start / End Page

108941

Location

Netherlands

Related Subject Headings

  • Neurology & Neurosurgery
  • 5203 Clinical and health psychology
  • 3202 Clinical sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Srivali, N., & Cheungpasitporn, W. (2026). Concordance of wearable device sleep metrics with patient-reported sleep quality: A systematic review. Sleep Med, 144, 108941. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sleep.2026.108941
Srivali, Narat, and Wisit Cheungpasitporn. “Concordance of wearable device sleep metrics with patient-reported sleep quality: A systematic review.Sleep Med 144 (April 2, 2026): 108941. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sleep.2026.108941.
Srivali, Narat, and Wisit Cheungpasitporn. “Concordance of wearable device sleep metrics with patient-reported sleep quality: A systematic review.Sleep Med, vol. 144, Apr. 2026, p. 108941. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.sleep.2026.108941.
Journal cover image

Published In

Sleep Med

DOI

EISSN

1878-5506

Publication Date

April 2, 2026

Volume

144

Start / End Page

108941

Location

Netherlands

Related Subject Headings

  • Neurology & Neurosurgery
  • 5203 Clinical and health psychology
  • 3202 Clinical sciences